A Hendersonville mother believes Taylor Swift‘s new song “Ruin the Friendship” honors her late son. The mother says the track is “keeping his name alive.” Susan Lang recalls Swift and Jeffrey Lang as tight high school friends who traded jokes and shared early demos.
A source says the lyric details feel unmistakable, from Middle Tennessee snapshots to a prom memory that lingers. Fans are now linking the fresh track to Swift’s teen years and her latest album chapter.
Taylor Swift’s ‘Ruin the Friendship’ is reportedly about one of her old schoolmates
As cited in tennessean.com, Susan Lang says, “Ruin the Friendship” sounds like Taylor Swift writing to her old schoolmate, Jeffrey Lang. When the song appears on her twelfth studio album “The Life of a Showgirl”, timing reopens a personal history. The song features vivid markers, such as Gallatin Road and a lakeside beach. It rests on specific memories and a prom glance across the room. The lyrics mirror Hendersonville routines and their bond.
Lang puts the connection plainly. “Anytime Swift would write a song, Jeffrey Lang was the first to hear it.” That closeness pairs with the lyric cues many locals recognize. Swift sings of “glistening grass from September rain” and cruising “Gallatin Road” to watch a game. Another couplet recalls “your brother’s jeep” and a smile that “miles wide” still echoes…