"I was taught to think the next week or month or year will only get better than it is today. So I just keep waiting to see hoe great it will get!"
About this Quote
Optimism, in Stevie Ray Vaughan's hands, isn't the cheesy kind you slap on a poster; it's a survival technique with calluses. "I was taught" matters: this isn't a self-made mantra so much as a handed-down discipline, a learned way to keep moving when the present is loud, messy, and imperfect. The phrasing stretches time out - week, month, year - like a slow blues progression, building tension by refusing the quick fix. He's not promising a miracle tomorrow. He's training his attention on a longer arc.
The subtext is particularly sharp given Vaughan's biography: a virtuoso who lived at full volume, then fought his way through addiction and into sobriety. In that light, "I just keep waiting" isn't passive. It's patience as practice. Recovery, touring, trying to stay steady under the pressure of legend - all of it requires the ability to believe in incremental improvement without needing immediate proof. He frames hope as something you show up for, not something you "feel" on command.
There's also a musician's mindset embedded here: greatness isn't a static destination, it's the next set, the next record, the next night you play a little cleaner, dig a little deeper. Even the typo-ish "hoe" reads like an accidental tell: the sentiment is unpolished, spoken, human. Vaughan's intent is to make forward motion feel inevitable. Not because life is fair, but because you can choose to keep your eyes on the next chorus.
The subtext is particularly sharp given Vaughan's biography: a virtuoso who lived at full volume, then fought his way through addiction and into sobriety. In that light, "I just keep waiting" isn't passive. It's patience as practice. Recovery, touring, trying to stay steady under the pressure of legend - all of it requires the ability to believe in incremental improvement without needing immediate proof. He frames hope as something you show up for, not something you "feel" on command.
There's also a musician's mindset embedded here: greatness isn't a static destination, it's the next set, the next record, the next night you play a little cleaner, dig a little deeper. Even the typo-ish "hoe" reads like an accidental tell: the sentiment is unpolished, spoken, human. Vaughan's intent is to make forward motion feel inevitable. Not because life is fair, but because you can choose to keep your eyes on the next chorus.
Quote Details
| Topic | Optimism |
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