The 2020s File Feature
Count Your Blessings
Count Your Blessings — $uicideboy$'s August Entry in 2025A Decade of Underground DominanceBy the summer of 2025, the New Orleans duo $uicideboy$ (Aristos Pet…
01 The Story
Count Your Blessings — $uicideboy$'s August Entry in 2025
A Decade of Underground Dominance
By the summer of 2025, the New Orleans duo $uicideboy$ (Aristos Petrou and Scott Arceneaux Jr., known individually as Ruby da Cherry and $crim) had spent more than a decade building one of the most devoted fanbases in underground rap without ever significantly compromising the aesthetic that attracted those fans in the first place. Where most artists in their position would have pivoted toward mainstream palatability at some point, they had largely resisted that pressure, maintaining a sound rooted in abrasive production, confessional lyrics about depression, addiction, and mortality, and a visual identity that reflected the darkest registers of Southern Gothic sensibility. That consistency was not a liability; it was the whole point.
The Sound of the Track
Count Your Blessings arrives in a period when the duo has grown more comfortable operating in spaces between pure underground and commercial visibility. Their catalog by 2025 includes a significant body of work that has touched the Hot 100 with increasing regularity, demonstrating that there is a genuine mainstream audience for what they make, even if that audience comes to them on their own terms rather than through conventional pop mechanisms. The title phrase is one of those familiar exhortations that takes on a different quality entirely when delivered in the context of music that has spent years sitting with darkness rather than away from it.
The Billboard Moment
Count Your Blessings debuted at number 90 on the Billboard Hot 100 on August 16, 2025, the chart date also representing its peak. It charted for a single week, a quick appearance that nonetheless places it in the documented history of the Hot 100. For $uicideboy$, whose career was built entirely outside the mainstream music industry's traditional promotional apparatus, any Hot 100 presence represents a genuine crossover of underground energy into charted territory. Their fanbase streams with the intensity and loyalty that converts cult following into commercial numbers.
Gratitude Through a Dark Lens
The phrase "count your blessings" is typically delivered as gentle encouragement, a reminder to appreciate what you have. In the $uicideboy$ context, that same phrase takes on considerably more weight and complexity. When artists who have documented suicidal ideation, addiction, and grief across hundreds of songs tell you to count your blessings, the instruction carries accumulated history. It is not delivered from a position of comfortable optimism but from somewhere that has seen the alternative. That recontextualization is exactly the kind of thing their most devoted listeners parse carefully.
Longevity in a Genre That Moves Fast
One of the more remarkable things about $uicideboy$ as a career story is how they have maintained relevance across a decade without the support systems that most mainstream artists rely on. No major label machinery, no choreographed radio campaigns, no carefully managed image pivots; just a steady stream of output and a community of listeners who treat the music as personally essential rather than casually disposable. Charting in 2025 on the strength of that model alone is a kind of institutional argument about how the music industry has shifted, how streaming has genuinely democratized access to chart positions for artists whose path once would have ended at the door of a major label.
Put on headphones, find a quiet moment, and let this one find you.
“Count Your Blessings” — $uicideboy$'s singular moment on the 2020s charts.
02 Song Meaning
What Count Your Blessings by $uicideboy$ Really Means
Gratitude Under Pressure
There is a particular kind of gratitude that only people who have survived very difficult periods understand fully: not the easy thankfulness of comfortable circumstances, but the harder, more complicated appreciation that comes from having stared at the alternative and stepped back. $uicideboy$ have spent their career documenting experiences of depression, substance abuse, and suicidal thinking with a candor that borders on forensic. When they invoke a phrase about counting blessings, that invocation is weighted by everything that catalog has already said. The gratitude being described is real precisely because the difficulty it responds to has also been real.
The Juxtaposition at the Heart of the Song
Much of $uicideboy$'s emotional power comes from juxtaposition: placing dark subject matter alongside familiar language, deploying conventional phrases in unconventional emotional contexts, wrapping genuine suffering in the aesthetics of horror and grandeur simultaneously. Count Your Blessings operates in that tradition. The title sounds like advice from a grandmother or a motivational poster; the sonic context in which it is delivered sounds like neither. That gap between what the words say and where those words are living creates the tension the duo specializes in.
Southern Gothic and the Louisiana Inheritance
New Orleans has its own relationship with death, grief, and celebration that is genuinely distinct from the rest of American culture. The tradition of jazz funerals, where grief and joy coexist in the same procession, reflects a cultural attitude toward mortality that treats it as something to be engaged with rather than avoided. $uicideboy$ come from that city and carry its complicated spiritual DNA. Songs about loss and survival and the grudging appreciation of still being alive fit naturally into a cultural tradition where those themes have never been considered inappropriate for musical expression.
The Fan Community and Its Role
Part of what makes this track meaningful beyond the music itself is the community context. $uicideboy$'s fanbase is notable for its emotional investment and its high proportion of listeners who find the duo's music therapeutically useful in the way that only music that tells the truth about dark feelings can be. When the artists address their listeners with something that sounds like encouragement, that encouragement is received differently than it would be from an artist who had never documented the depth of struggle. The trust is already established. The "blessing" being counted, for many listeners, includes the existence of this music itself.
Survival as Subject Matter
The arc of $uicideboy$'s career is, in many ways, a survival narrative told in real time across hundreds of releases. Both members have spoken about their own experiences with addiction and mental health in ways that document genuine struggle rather than performed darkness. A song about counting blessings, arriving a decade into that career, reads as a kind of progress report: they are still here, still making things, still finding reasons to keep going. For listeners who have followed that arc, this track does not require elaborate interpretation. The meaning is already in the biography behind it.
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