
The CIA can access your phone and laptop microphones and cameras, per former CIA officer John Kiriakou.
Kai Asmir
10.6K posts

@Kai1915
Loving my life right now!! #team @bslade #teambslade 👬🏿❤🖤💚

The CIA can access your phone and laptop microphones and cameras, per former CIA officer John Kiriakou.






bslade.bandcamp.com/track/cerulean… “cerulean rain” feels like a conversation between freedom and indecision, wrapped in something anointed & spiritual. At its core, the song is about someone caught between letting go and holding on. One moment there’s an open invitation to rise, to move, to choose differently… and the next, there’s frustration with someone who can’t make up their mind, stuck in cycles and wasting time. That tension drives the emotional pull of the record. The “cerulean rain” becomes more than an image. It feels like a cleansing force. Something vast, calming, and a little surreal. It represents release, transformation, and the kind of emotional reset you can’t fake. When the song leans into “baptize me, make me over,” it shifts from relationship tension into something deeper. A desire to be renewed, to shed confusion, to become something clearer and more aligned. There’s a dual energy running throughout. One voice is grounded and aware, calling out inconsistency. The other is reaching upward, almost surrendering, asking for change, for clarity, for rebirth. By the end, it doesn’t feel like it’s just about another person anymore. It feels internal. Like standing in a storm you actually asked for… hoping it washes everything off and leaves you closer to who you’re supposed to be. “Cerulean Rain” lives in that space where emotion, accountability, and transformation all collide… and the feeling really does go on and on.







