Celine Dion Falling Into: You By

That night, Elena picked up her bow. She didn't play the classical scales she’d practiced for years. Instead, she began to improvise, her cello’s deep, woody vibrato weaving through the melodies of She played until her fingers ached and the moon replaced the rain.

In 1996, the world felt a little larger, and for Elena, a shy cellist in a rain-slicked Seattle, it felt a lot lonelier. She spent her days in a cramped apartment, the walls thin enough to hear her neighbor’s television and the constant rhythmic drumming of the Pacific Northwest rain. Celine Dion Falling Into You By

Elena bought it on a whim, needing something to drown out the silence of her own thoughts. When she got home and pressed play, the room didn't just fill with sound; it transformed. That night, Elena picked up her bow

The album became her soundtrack. It was in her ears as she finally auditioned for the city symphony, and it was playing in her head when she got the call that she’d made it. In 1996, the world felt a little larger,

She sat on her floor, her cello forgotten in its case, and let the album wash over her. By the time the title track, began, the percussion mimicking a heartbeat, Elena realized she wasn't just listening to a pop record. She was learning how to feel again. The lyrics spoke of a surrender she had been afraid of—not just to another person, but to life itself.

Decades later, when Elena looks at her worn jewel case, she doesn't just see a multi-platinum album. She sees the moment she stopped bracing for the fall and finally allowed herself to land.