Choosing Me Again
"A bookstore meeting, two years long distance, and Sunday pancakes."
Examples show the kind of specific details that make a generated song feel like a real gift: the places, phrases, people, and promises that belong to one recipient.
"A bookstore meeting, two years long distance, and Sunday pancakes."
"A thank-you song for years of packed lunches, late calls, and quiet courage."
"Chaotic memories, shared phrases, and the friend who always stayed."
Use this direction when the gift needs to feel romantic, warm, and private without becoming too formal.
Use this direction for Mother's Day, birthdays, or a private thank-you where the listener should feel seen.
Use this direction for birthdays, moving-away gifts, graduations, or a group-chat surprise.
MeloLetter is built for gift songs where the personal details matter more than the prompt format. A birthday song can use a nickname and a family joke. A song for mom can turn repeated care into the chorus. An anniversary song can follow the timeline from first meeting to the promise that still matters. Before checkout, you can preview the lyric direction and decide whether the song feels specific enough to send.
Use these examples as starting points for your own brief. If the recipient is romantic, start with the anniversary structure. If the message is gratitude, use the song-for-mom pattern. If the gift should feel funny first and sincere second, use the best-friend example and add the phrases only your group would understand.