"From the Sky" is a powerful ballad dedicated to the eternal, unseen love between a mother and her daughter. Blending poetry with melody, this song tells the story of a woman who endures trauma, distance, and sacrifice — yet still offers unconditional protection and presence from beyond physical limits. Told from the perspective of a mother — possibly in spirit or simply emotionally distant due to life’s trials — the song embraces themes of grief, strength, grace, and sacred legacy. With lyrics that hover between this world and the next, the voice in this song becomes a divine protector, whispering through wind, stars, and silence. The chorus anchors the emotional weight: "Even with my wings hanging down, I fly above to keep you safe and sound." It is both a metaphor for maternal fatigue and a vow of spiritual vigilance — even when the mother appears invisible, she is still rising to cover her child with love. - I wrote this for my daughter. But I also wrote it for every mother who’s had to love through pain, through separation, through silence. Sometimes we’re the tough ones — we don’t always get to be soft. But the love never dies. Even when our wings hang low, even when we’re gone, that love keeps flying. This song is a testimony. A spiritual lullaby. A reminder that a mother’s soul doesn’t stop showing up — not in this life, not in the next. Even when we become a mystery, we are still present in the wind, the stars, the sacred lines. That’s the power of a mother’s vow — it’s eternal.