Ever notice how some songs make you shiver even if it’s blazing outside? Take 'Cold Heart' by Elton John and Dua Lipa—it’s a bop, but the lyrics are all about love gone frosty, stitching together old Elton lines into something fresh yet bittersweet. Then there’s 'Cold' by Annie Lennox, where her voice practically drips with iciness as she croons about emotional isolation.
For something more raw, 'Stone Cold' by Demi Lovato belts out heartbreak with such intensity that you can almost see their breath in the air. And let’s not forget 'Ice Ice Baby'—okay, maybe Vanilla Ice wasn’t aiming for deep metaphor, but that hook sure sticks like frostbite! It’s funny how these tracks span genres yet all circle back to that same frozen core—love that’s iced over, refusing to thaw.
Music has this uncanny ability to capture the frostiest emotions, and when it comes to songs about cold hearts, a few immediately spring to mind. 'Cold As Ice' by Foreigner is practically the anthem for emotional detachment—that iconic piano riff paired with lyrics like 'You're as cold as ice, you're willing to sacrifice our love' hits like a winter storm. Then there's 'Frozen' by Madonna, where she sings about love turning to ice, and the production itself feels chilly with its synth-heavy soundscape.
On a darker note, 'Heart of Ice' from the 'Batman: The Animated Series' soundtrack (yes, it counts!) embodies the villain Mr. Freeze’s tragic numbness. And for a modern twist, Billie Eilish’s 'ilomilo' whispers about fear of abandonment over eerie, sparse beats—it’s like listening to a heart slowly frost over. What fascinates me is how these artists use temperature as a metaphor for emotional distance; it’s almost visceral how the music makes you feel the cold.
If you want lyrics that feel like a winter wasteland for the soul, 'The Cold' by Exitmusic is haunting—Alesia’s whispery vocals describe a relationship so brittle it could snap. Or 'Cold Love' by Rainbow Kitten Surprise, where the warmth of love curdles into something distant and sharp. Even 'Cold Cold Cold' by Cage the Elephant has this jittery energy, like someone trying to shake off emotional numbness.
And who could ignore 'Cold Water' by Damien Rice? It’s more about desperation than detachment, but that line 'I’m a long way from shore'? Chills. What ties these together isn’t just the word 'cold'—it’s the way the music itself turns brittle, slow, or hollow to match the lyrics. Like holding snow in your hands and watching it melt into nothing.
2026-05-27 04:16:11
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Makayla Hopkins - I promised myself I’d never get involved with a politician, but Stacey Sherbourn changed everything. Now I know the truth, and it’s uglier than I ever imagined. Her lies aren’t just personal—they threaten everything I care about. Armed with proof of her corruption, I’ve come to the Colorado Rockies to stop her before she can destroy the pristine wilderness she’s so eager to sacrifice. But what I didn’t plan for was Lilac Ray. Fierce, sharp, and breathtaking, she’s everything Stacey isn’t—and everything I can’t afford to be distracted by.
Lilac Ray- When Makayla Hopkins arrived in the Rockies, I knew she wasn’t just another hiker seeking solace. She came with purpose—and danger. My half-sister Stacey had already done enough to destroy these mountains, and I wasn’t about to trust her ex, no matter how determined or charming she seemed. But Makayla’s not who I expected. Beneath her cool, tech-savvy exterior, there’s a fire that matches my own. The closer we get to taking Stacey down, the more I realize the real danger might not be trusting Makayla—it might be falling for her.
Book 6 in the Ravenwood Series. It can be read as a standalone. However, to learn about the characters and past events that may be referenced, you should check out the rest of the series.
Book 1 - The Princes of Ravenwood (staring Makayla's triplet cousins Darius, Elijah, and Forrest)
Book 2 - Chasing Kitsune
Book 3 - Expect the Unexpected
Book 4 - Out of My League (staring Makayla's cousin Reese)
Book 5 - Man's Best Wingman (staring Makayla's cousin Clay featuring her in a supporting role)
Two hearts which have always been filled with warmth and joy for so many years of their lives.
Suddenly one heart becomes cold because of the other heart. The other heart becomes cold because of some other reasons.
Now these both have one thing in common that is coldness surrounding their hearts.
Did they really became ice cold?
(or)
Is it just a façade to show everyone?
(or)
Is it directed in high demands only towards each other?
Could they melt each other coldness easily or would they need the help of a little angel.
Sometimes melting ice can be more difficult than we actually think…
"Why are you angry?" I asked him. "It's not like we're a couple."
He stopped, and stared at me, boring my eyes with his emerald eyes. "If we are…" He paused, clenching his jaw, "then am I allowed to be angry?”
I looked at him like he was insane.
“Then we'll take it to that level." He continued. "I'm serious. I want you.”
Leizel Snow Garcia Waterstrings is not just fierce. She's more than that. Ending up as an ice cream worker in a local ice cream shop, it was her one step of becoming a strong and independent woman.
And that's when a cold-hearted stranger came in view. Eion Aurelio Hudson.
Out of seven billion people in the world, the two hard-headed people crossed paths, making her "strong and independent woman" facade slowly fall apart.
With all the dramas, free food, forgotten birthdays, Robot handling, idiots around, and emotional crisis, will she be able to melt his winter heart with her blazing fire or will this fire be put away instantly?
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One Blazing Head. One Winter Heart. Two Hard-headed people. A huge disaster.
(Book 1 of Hearts Series but can be read as standalone)
She was rejected.
He was cheated on.
He was cold.
She was never the same.
He was a Beta.
She was a nobody.
She was heartless.
He gave her life meaning.
They said she was colder than ice.
But he didn't want her any other way.
I was a rarity. A wolf born with two hearts.
My parents paid a fortune to rogue healers to implant the second one when I was just an embryo.
All because my sister, Cora, was born with a defective heart.
They waited for me to grow up, just so I could give my second heart to her.
Later, I met my mate, Alpha Rhys.
He treated me so well. I really thought he was different from my parents.
But the day Cora’s heart failed, my mate held my hand. His touch was terribly gentle.
"Baby, just give Cora one heart. You have a spare, right?"
He didn't know.
I only had one heart left.
I gave my spare to him years ago.
The fake daughter only sneezed.
My three brothers reacted as if she were on her deathbed, crowding around her anxiously and refusing to let her out of their sight.
So when she pointed her finger at me again, insisting I had shoved her into the pool, they accepted her story without a second thought.
They hauled me to a deserted walk-in freezer, sealed the door behind me at -58°F, and made sure the only escape was out of reach.
I screamed for my oldest brother, the CEO, to let me out.
He called me a cruel attention seeker.
I begged my second brother, the doctor.
He told me I finally got what I deserved.
I begged my third brother, the big-shot attorney.
He just sneered. "You've always been jealous of Chloe. Now you pushed her into the pool when you knew she was fragile? You really are rotten. Someone like you needs to stay in there and cool off."
Then, they bundled Chloe into their arms and rushed her to the hospital over a sneeze.
Bit by bit, warmth seeped from my body, until it seemed like ice was flowing through my veins instead of blood.
After thirty-six hours, I slipped away, lost to the cold.
Three days later, Chloe returned from the hospital, and only then did my brothers remember I existed.
But by then, the freezer had already claimed me.
The phrase 'colded heart' in literature often evokes a sense of emotional detachment or numbness, but it's more nuanced than just being 'cold-hearted.' It's like a character's soul has been left out in the winter too long—frostbitten, not dead, but changed. Think of Ebenezer Scrooge in 'A Christmas Carol' before his transformation. His heart isn't just unfeeling; it's been hardened by life's disappointments, layer by layer, until warmth seems impossible. I love how literature uses this imagery to explore trauma, isolation, or even societal pressures. It's not always villainy; sometimes, it's survival.
What fascinates me is how writers depict the thawing of a 'colded heart.' It’s rarely sudden. In 'Howl’s Moving Castle,' Sophie’s gradual softening of Howl’s prickly exterior feels earned because his coldness stems from vulnerability. Literature loves these arcs—characters who learn to feel again, like ice melting into water. It’s a reminder that even the most distant hearts might just need the right story to warm them.
The idea of a 'cold heart' hits close to home for me—it’s one of those metaphors that feels almost physical. When I think about emotional numbness, it’s not just the absence of feeling; it’s like a frost has settled over everything. There’s a scene in 'Frozen' where Elsa’s fear turns her powers inward, and she literally freezes her own heart. It’s a perfect visual for how emotional shutdown works. You don’t just stop caring; you build walls so thick that even warmth can’t penetrate.
What’s fascinating is how this shows up across cultures. In Japanese storytelling, you often see characters like Gojo Satoru from 'Jujutsu Kaisen'—technically untouchable, but that strength comes at the cost of connection. It’s not villainy; it’s self-preservation gone too far. Real-life trauma responses mirror this too—the way people dissociate during crises isn’t so different from that metaphorical ice. The scary part? Unlike fairytales, real hearts don’t always thaw with a hug.