There are songs that catch you off guard, and "Find You" by Khid Ceejay is one of them. The Afro-fusion track opens with a confession that feels almost too honest: "I've got nothing, I came here on my own." From the very first line, the artist is not performing strength. He is asking for it.
The song moves through feelings of uncertainty, loneliness, and vulnerability, weaving together English and Pidgin in a way that feels completely natural. Lines like "Shey you see me? Shey you dey hear me? Abeg no forget me" carry the kind of rawness that does not need translation. Anyone who has ever felt overlooked or spiritually adrift will recognize that plea immediately.
What makes "Find You" land so differently from other faith-inspired records is its willingness to sit inside the doubt. Khid Ceejay does not rush toward resolution. He admits to wanting to give up, then pulls back: "Said it's not time, it's not time." That tension, the push and pull between despair and perseverance, is exactly where the song lives.
The chorus offers no lyrics in the traditional sense, just vocalisations that carry the emotional weight the words cannot fully hold. It is a deliberate choice, and it works. Sometimes feeling trumps language.
If this track is any indication of where Khid Ceejay is headed creatively, the conversation around his music is only just beginning.
Originally published by NotJustOk.