"Send Me On My Way" by Rusted Root, contributed by Gabriela Navarro (2025)
For many others carrying the weight of parental abandonment, there can be a feeling of ambiguous loss. Your parent is not dead but they are gone and something is lost. It doesn’t come with closure or ceremony. It’s a quiet, aching absence that stretches into the future. "Send Me On My Way" by Rusted Root, famously used in the final moments of the 1996 film Matilda, offers a rare kind of comfort in such complicated grief: not in the form of resolution, but in its bright, buoyant forward motion. The song plays as Matilda leaves behind a life of neglect and steps into something new with the lovely Ms. Honey. That moment doesn't erase her suffering, but it reshapes it into acceptance. She is not just a girl who was unwanted by her parents. She is someone who found family elsewhere. In the song’s playful melody and openhearted lyrics, there’s an invitation: to keep going. To believe that better is out there, even if it didn’t begin at home. For those who’ve experienced abandonment, this song might resonate as a soundtrack to self-reclamation. It doesn’t deny the past, but it doesn’t stay there either. It says: “You’re allowed to leave. You’re allowed to hope. You’re allowed to find your people and call that love.” “Send Me On My Way” is not just a song of departure, it’s of becoming. It reminds me, and sharing - perhaps others, that moving forward isn’t betrayal of the past. It’s an act of courage. For anyone who has been let down by the people meant to protect them, this song is light-footed but grounded in the quiet insistence that you are not only worth more, but capable of seeking it.