ROREY drops "Hurts Me To Hate You" Music Vide

ROREY drops "Hurts Me To Hate You" Music Video
The stunning and transformative song is shared alongside a personal music video with ROREY and her mom. ROREY confides, “I wrote Hurts Me To Hate You at 21, when I realized the anger I held toward my mother wasn’t protecting me — it was only keeping me stuck in a cycle of pain. And it hurt me to hate her. Even though she may never fully understand me, I still wanted her in my life. And that meant accepting her for who she is, and what she’s capable of giving. It was a profound turning point for me in embracing radical acceptance. At the end of the day, I am responsible for my emotions - not my mother. You can’t control other people. It has taken me years to get there.”
New York–based singer-songwriter and musician ROREY (26) transforms raw confession into art that unsettles as much as it heals. Her sophomore EP, Dysphoria, is a fearless plunge into the contradictions of mental illness, where haunting melodies and ethereal vocals merge with hypnotic, swirling instrumentals.
Co-written and produced in 2021 with longtime collaborator Scott Effman, the project captures the chaos, beauty, and disorientation of a young artist clawing her way toward meaning in the midst of a manic episode.
ROREY’s music doesn’t just resonate, it names the truths you’re afraid to speak and reminds you that you’re not alone in feeling them.
Her new single "Hurts Me To Hate You" is a powerful song of acceptance, healing and overcoming anger. The stunning and transformative song is shared alongside a personal music video with ROREY and her mom. ROREY confides, “I wrote Hurts Me To Hate You at 21, when I realized the anger I held toward my mother wasn’t protecting me — it was only keeping me stuck in a cycle of pain. And it hurt me to hate her. Even though she may never fully understand me, I still wanted her in my life. And that meant accepting her for who she is, and what she’s capable of giving. It was a profound turning point for me in embracing radical acceptance. At the end of the day, I am responsible for my emotions - not my mother. You can’t control other people. It has taken me years to get there.”