Emotional Profile
(Inspiration · Jun 2026)
"Deixa-me Sonhar" resonates with those who've loved deeply and lost—people carrying the weight of memories they can't quite release. The song captures that liminal space where heartbreak and hope coexist, where looking back feels both painful and necessary. Listeners return to it during moments of reflection, finding solace in its acknowledgment that dreams, even broken ones, remain worth holding onto.
Inspiration hits you first, opening a space where your own dreams feel suddenly possible again. It lifts the weight just enough to remind you why you held onto those hopes in the first place. From there, a tender sadness follows—the kind that makes you sit with what you've lost without drowning in it.
You return to this song when you're caught between two versions of yourself: the person you were when you believed in something, and who you've become since. It's the soundtrack for late nights when you're sorting through old photographs, or quiet moments when you need permission to want something again despite the hurt.
Rita Guerra crafted a song about dreams and aspiration, but listeners heard something more fragmented—a permission slip to feel broken while still believing in better days. The gap reveals that inspiration often lives inside heartbreak, not separate from it, and people found solace not in the dream itself but in the act of being allowed to dream despite their wounds.