I Got Better

Album: I'm The Problem (2025)
Charted: 7
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Songfacts®:

  • If you ever wanted to hear what emotional maturity sounds like in denim, boots, and with a mild Southern twang, "I Got Better" is a place to start. Nestled somewhere between pastoral charm and post-breakup clarity, the song finds Morgan Wallen - usually a connoisseur of honky-tonk regrets and tailgate nostalgia - indulging in something perilously close to personal growth.
  • Written with his usual band of collaborators (Blake Pendergrass, Chase McGill, Charlie Handsome, Ernest and Michael Hardy), the song is about the awkward, glorious relief of no longer being in the wrong relationship. As Wallen tells it, he was losing touch with his friends, his mama, and even himself, until the whole thing blessedly collapsed. After that? Well, he got better.
  • Wallen drew inspiration from real-life events on his Tennessee farm.

    Neighbors still shooting all of next year's deer

    Morgan Wallen based the line about the neighbors shooting next year's deer on an actual incident. He'd been watching the deer for two years, only for it to be killed before reaching its full-antlered potential.
  • Producer Joey Moi gives the song a relaxed, hazy arrangement with synths and gentle guitars, creating a soothing backdrop that mirrors the song's contentment and optimism.
  • "I Got Better" is part of I'm The Problem, Wallen's fourth album. While much of the album is characterized by regret and the consequences of Wallen's actions, this song stands out for its focus on positive change.
  • "I Got Better" shares its optimistic, forward-looking spirit with songs like "Thought You Should Know," where he reflects to his mom how far he's come personally and emotionally, and "Don't Think Jesus," a ballad about divine patience amid personal failings. "One Thing At A Time," the title track from his 2023 record, also shares this sense of cautious hopefulness - a man attempting, one beer or prayer at a time, to sort his life out.
  • "I Got Better" came together one morning in late 2024 over coffee, eggs, and a spirited theological debate about the scale of Noah's flood. Yes, really. Morgan Wallen had invited Blake Pendergrass, Chase McGill, Charlie Handsome, Ernest, and Michael Hardy to his Tennessee farmhouse for a breakfast songwriting session, and before long the group chat veered straight into the Old Testament.

    "Ernest was going off of that conversation," Pendergrass remembered to Billboard. "He just sang that melody, like, 'The world got bigger since the Bible got wrote.'"

    That line sparked something. Within minutes, the team flipped it into the emotionally charged hook: "I got better since you got gone." The flood talk gave way to heartbreak, and the song began to take shape.
  • Charlie Handsome fished through his phone for track ideas. He landed on a moody progression built with chugging arpeggios and brooding minor chords, a far cry from typical country fare. "That's not the music I would play at all," McGill admitted. "But Charlie does that perfectly wrong in all the right ways."
  • Wallen wanted to keep the lyrics simple - almost stubbornly so. "In my mind, the song needed to be a certain way," he said. "Everyone else kind of had a different idea about it, but I was adamant the guy didn't change anything in his life except that the girl was gone."

    And so, the first verse is a quiet victory lap through a life re-stabilized: deer hunting, watching games, Fridays at the bar. It's not glamorous, but it's his.

    The second verse zooms in on what was wrong: the girlfriend who isolated him from friends and family. No melodrama, just clarity. And though plenty of country songs get by without a bridge, this one delivers a perfectly passive-aggressive gem: "I ain't saying you're the weight on my back, but it's not there anymore." As Pendergrass put it: "It's just a funny way of saying everything without saying it."
  • Hardy took the reins on the chorus melody, nudging it up slightly for an emotional lift. "I'm finally back to being who I am," Wallen sings, a deceptively weighty line that became the thesis of the entire song. "That's kind of the idea of life, right?" McGill commented. "Everybody just wants to be who they are and be loved for it."
  • Directed by Justin Clough, the video uses a car crash as a metaphor for heartbreak. It opens with Wallen climbing from the wreckage, battered and bruised. As he walks away, his cuts and scrapes begin to fade, symbolizing the healing process that comes with moving on from a broken relationship.

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