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Your voice is not just for sounding “good.” Sometimes it’s how you survive a hard moment, how you move energy, and how you remember who you are. Osha Rose shares a raw turning point from giving birth to her daughter, when deep moaning and vibration didn’t just help her cope, it literally changed what she felt in her body. That experience flips a switch: her voice stops being a performance tool and starts becoming medicine, regulation, and truth.
From there, Osha rewinds to the roots of her musical journey, from childhood classroom songs that still live in her bones to the moment music began to feel like something she had to earn. She talks about West Side Story, stepping into a support role, and how easy it is to build an identity around being “the one behind the scenes.” Osha also opens up about relationships, including a long partnership with a musician, where she used her event planning skills to help a band thrive while quietly doubting her own right to create.
Then everything opens again through vocal embodiment training with Laura Rose and songwriting guidance that blends soul, structure, and real craft. Osha shares how songs started coming through in motherhood, how “Stripped” evolved from emptiness into something truer, and how an EP intended as dance yoga music turned into lyrical tracks like “Breakdown,” “Reflections,” and “Rise Again,” complete with DIY music videos. If you’re searching for vocal embodiment, songwriting process, authentic self-expression, or creativity after motherhood, this is a reminder that curiosity is a compass.
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