There is a certain weight to a song that feels lived in, the kind that doesn’t just tell a story but carries the marks of time, regret, and redemption. John Dawson’s latest single, “Mend in My Ways,” is one of those songs—a quiet but powerful reflection on taking love for granted and the slow, often painful process of setting things right. Following the success of “Where You Belong,” “Things That I Meant to Say,” and “Life Just Came to Me,” Dawson continues to carve his space in the folk-roots tradition as a storyteller whose words feel as familiar as a well-worn book, yet as profound as a revelation.
Built on a simple but hypnotic ostinato, “Mend in My Ways” is not about grand declarations—it’s about humility, self-awareness, and the realization that love is not something to be assumed but continually earned. “I finally found my way back to you, love / I stumbled on the road to home,” Dawson sings, his voice carrying the weight of experience. The song’s bridge subtly shifts the harmonic ground beneath the listener, mirroring the quiet epiphany at its core: "I’ll get over the fear that got ahold of me / I feel older / It’s a feeling that has set me free."
Listen on Spotify here:
open.spotify.com/album/2gHswiczkG4eaZ5a3GCa5U
If Van Morrison’s “And It Stoned Me” used water as a metaphor for transcendence, Dawson draws from a similar well, closing the song with an image of deep, cool water that promises renewal. This is folk music in its purest form—a song that doesn’t demand attention but commands it through its honesty.
Thematically, “Mend in My Ways” fits into a long lineage of folk confessionals, from Jackson Browne’s “Late for the Sky” to John Prine’s “Long Monday”—songs that understand that regret is something to sit with. Dawson’s strength as a songwriter lies in his ability to craft a song that feels deeply personal yet universal, offering listeners a mirror in which to see their own moments of realization and renewal.
Dawson describes the song as a reckoning with the way love can become background noise when it should be the melody that leads us forward. “Mend in My Ways is the story of taking for granted the person I should have valued most,” he says. “It’s about recognizing that love isn’t just given, it’s chosen—every single day.”
As the fourth single from his album Outlier, “Mend in My Ways” provides a moment of breath before the weight of what follows. It is sparse yet resonant, a song that lands softly but stays long after its final note. Where past singles have explored finding one’s place in the world and making peace with the past, this track turns inward, grappling with the personal cost of complacency in love.
In a world of fleeting moments, John Dawson is crafting songs that linger, songs that understand that folk music is about truth-telling. And in “Mend in My Ways,” the truth is as clear as the water that promises a fresh start.