By Tom Brumpton

Vocalist - Akarusa Yami

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December 10th 2010. I was sat in an Italian restaurant on Lincoln’s Brayford Wharf. It was snowing heavily outside. My phone rings, it’s my girlfriend. She’s calling to break up with me. Well, kinda. She gets half way through and passes the phone to her friend to finish the job. Harsh, right? For the first time in I don’t know how many years I’d been reduced to a blubbering wreck. I called a few friends and my family. One of them offers to travel an hour on the train to make sure I’m OK. The other, who hates the snow, hops in his car and comes to find me. He told me months later that in 20 years of knowing me he had never seen me in such a mess.

I should point out that this wasn’t my first split, but this was easily the worst. The only way I felt I could deal with this was to write. I’d just started a new band, Akarusa Yami, and it seemed like the best way of working through it. I didn’t want to write a series of miserable love songs, so instead I scripted a few tracks about an individual’s life breaking down, them systematically figuring out how to work through it and come out the other side a better, happier person. The record became the band’s first EP “Ouroboros” and it opened more doors than we could’ve dreamed of. We played Bloodstock & got reviewed and interviewed by national magazines & radio stations across the UK, US and Europe. It put the band on the map of sorts, and we’ve gone from strength to strength since.

But while we were going through our strengths, I was slowly going mad; becoming more withdrawn and depressed. I was seeing a sea of doctors regarding a testicular cancer scare that was later discovered to be a blood clot. Had it not been removed I’d not have been able to have kids. I watched helplessly as members of my family flew in and out of hospital for their own various emergencies, and saw my best friend fly thousands of miles away to start a new life. All the while trying to keep my PR company afloat and dealing with my already terrible break up.

It took the better part of two years to thoroughly put everything behind me, but the thing I remember the most about it was the sense of isolation and being stuck. I don’t know now if it was a physical thing because of the clot (I was banned from the gym or any massively physical activities until after surgery), an emotional thing or maybe a combination of the two. Either way, I did become very depressed and distant. A lot of people close to me were celebrating anniversaries, getting engaged, having kids and I was staring at Christmas in bed with seven staples in my hip. 

While I’ll never begrudge anyone being happy, being surrounded by that joy made me worse. A result of the depression I’m sure, but it made the idea of being content and happy again seem like something that just wasn’t meant for me. So I threw myself into music and work, it seemed like the only logical thing to do. I travelled as much as possible and met a lot of people, but I only really felt comfortable if I was by myself working or heading off to the next event.

 Everyone at some point will endure something that will rip their guts out, and I’d hate to think what kind of mess I’d have been if I didn’t have music to turn to. If I’m proud of anything during this period, it’s that I turned my misery into something positive. Not everyone is that lucky, and I thank God for that much at least.

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