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Introduction

You know, I stumbled upon this song called “Whatcha Gonna Do With That Broken Heart,” and it completely took me by surprise. It’s one of those tracks that just wraps around you, making you feel every single word. The artist really nails that raw emotion we all go through after a tough breakup.

What strikes me the most is how the song doesn’t shy away from the pain. It dives headfirst into those feelings of confusion and hurt, asking the questions we often avoid. But at the same time, there’s this underlying current of hope. It’s like a gentle reminder that even when things fall apart, there’s a path forward—you just have to find it.

The melody is so captivating. It starts off softly, almost like a whisper, and then builds up as if mirroring the journey from heartbreak to healing. I found myself humming along without even realizing it. And the lyrics? They feel like a conversation with a close friend who’s been there and gets it.

If you’ve ever had your heart broken (and let’s be honest, who hasn’t?), this song will resonate with you on a deep level. It’s comforting to know that someone else has felt the same way and managed to turn it into something so beautiful.

Give it a listen when you have a moment. I think it might just become one of those songs you keep coming back to, especially on those days when you need a little musical pick-me-up

Video

Lyrics

How are you gonna have a good cry?
Punch a hole in the wall?
Are you gonna drink the Whiskey down
‘Til you can’t stand up at all?
Are you gonna blame the woman
Or admit you played a part?
chorus
Whatcha you gonna do
With that broken heart?
verse
Are you gonna find a stranger
And have a one night stand?
Are you gonna look inside yourself
And be as honest as you can?
These choices that you’re making
They tell you who you are
chorus
Whatcha you gonna do
With that broken heart?
verse
Are you gonna dwell on the past?
Are you gonna get past the pain?
Are you gonna hold on or let go
Or let it drive you insane?
Will you pick up pieces
Or just leave them where they are?
chorus
Whatcha you gonna do
With that broken heart?
verse
Are you gonna find forgiveness
Somewhere down the line?
And understand the reasons
That she left you behind
Will you let somebody love you
In spite of these scars?
chorus
Whatcha you gonna do
With that broken heart?
verse
Are you gonna dwell on the past?
Are you gonna get past the pain?
Are you gonna hold on or let go
Or let it drive you insane?
Will you pick up pieces
Or just leave them where they are?
chorus
Whatcha you gonna do
With that broken heart?
verse
Will you pick up pieces
Or just leave them where they are?
chorus
Whatcha you gonna do
With that broken heart?
chorus
Tell me whatcha you gonna do
With that broken heart?

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THE BOY DISAPPEARED UNDER KENTUCKY LAKE IN JULY. THREE YEARS LATER, HIS FATHER WOKE UP AT 3:30 A.M. AND WROTE THE SONG HE NEVER PLANNED TO RELEASE. On July 10, 2016, Craig Morgan’s family was on Kentucky Lake in Tennessee. His 19-year-old son, Jerry Greer, had just graduated from Dickson County High School. He had been an athlete. He was supposed to play football at Marshall University. That summer day was not supposed to become a headline. Jerry was tubing with another teenager when he fell into the water. He was wearing a life jacket. Then he did not come back up. The search began as rescue. Boats moved across the lake. Officials brought in sonar. Family waited through the kind of hours no parent knows how to measure. The next day, Jerry’s body was found. Craig did not turn the grief into music right away. For years, the house had to keep moving around the empty space. His wife Karen kept Jerry’s name alive in family conversations. Holidays still came. Birthdays still came. The pain did not leave just because the world stopped watching. Then, nearly three years later, Craig woke up before daylight. Around 3:30 in the morning, he got out of bed and started writing. “The Father, My Son, and the Holy Ghost” was not built like a radio single. Craig wrote and produced it himself. At first, he did not even intend to release it. Then he did. Blake Shelton heard it and pushed people toward the song. It climbed the iTunes charts without the usual machine behind it. That was not just another grief song. That was a father finally opening the door to a room his family had been living in since the lake took Jerry.

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THE BOY DISAPPEARED UNDER KENTUCKY LAKE IN JULY. THREE YEARS LATER, HIS FATHER WOKE UP AT 3:30 A.M. AND WROTE THE SONG HE NEVER PLANNED TO RELEASE. On July 10, 2016, Craig Morgan’s family was on Kentucky Lake in Tennessee. His 19-year-old son, Jerry Greer, had just graduated from Dickson County High School. He had been an athlete. He was supposed to play football at Marshall University. That summer day was not supposed to become a headline. Jerry was tubing with another teenager when he fell into the water. He was wearing a life jacket. Then he did not come back up. The search began as rescue. Boats moved across the lake. Officials brought in sonar. Family waited through the kind of hours no parent knows how to measure. The next day, Jerry’s body was found. Craig did not turn the grief into music right away. For years, the house had to keep moving around the empty space. His wife Karen kept Jerry’s name alive in family conversations. Holidays still came. Birthdays still came. The pain did not leave just because the world stopped watching. Then, nearly three years later, Craig woke up before daylight. Around 3:30 in the morning, he got out of bed and started writing. “The Father, My Son, and the Holy Ghost” was not built like a radio single. Craig wrote and produced it himself. At first, he did not even intend to release it. Then he did. Blake Shelton heard it and pushed people toward the song. It climbed the iTunes charts without the usual machine behind it. That was not just another grief song. That was a father finally opening the door to a room his family had been living in since the lake took Jerry.

THE STAGE WENT SILENT IN LAS VEGAS ON SUNDAY NIGHT. SIX DAYS LATER, THE SAME SINGER STOOD ON LIVE TELEVISION AND SANG TOM PETTY’S “I WON’T BACK DOWN.” The crowd at Route 91 Harvest did not know the last song would be interrupted by gunfire. It was October 1, 2017. Las Vegas. More than 22,000 people were packed into the festival grounds across from Mandalay Bay. Jason Aldean was onstage, closing the third night of the festival, doing what country stars do on nights like that — lights up, band loud, crowd singing back. Then the sound changed. At first, some people thought it was equipment. Then the band stopped. People started running. Aldean was rushed offstage. By the end of the night, 58 people were dead and hundreds more were injured. The shows after that were canceled. There was nothing normal to return to yet. Then Saturday came. Instead of opening Saturday Night Live with a sketch, the show opened with Jason Aldean standing under quiet studio lights. No joke. No big introduction. Just the man who had been on that Las Vegas stage less than a week earlier, looking into the camera and trying to speak for people still hurting. He said everyone was struggling to understand what had happened. Then the band started. Not one of his hits. Tom Petty’s “I Won’t Back Down.” Petty had died the day after the shooting. The song carried both losses into the same room. Aldean later released the performance to raise money for Las Vegas victims. That wasn’t a comeback performance. That was a country singer walking back to a microphone before the silence had even cleared.