We often reduce artists to their headlines. To their worst moments, or to the myths we build after they’re gone. But Jahseh Onfroy — XXXTentacion — refuses to be simplified. And maybe that’s the point.
The Paradox of Pain: Why XXXTentacion Still Matters xxxtentacion
Now, years later, his legacy is still a battleground. Cancel him or canonize him? Neither feels fully right. Maybe his real lesson is that humans are not meant to be static symbols. We are rivers of impulse, trauma, growth, and relapse. X’s music remains powerful because it refuses to resolve that tension. It sits in the ugly middle — where most of us actually live. We often reduce artists to their headlines
And then, at 20, he was gone. Gunned down in a flash of senseless violence — the very chaos he both rapped about and tried to rise above. And maybe that’s the point
He was a teenager who rapped about stabbing people with ice picks, yet sang vulnerably about heartbreak and suicide over lo-fi guitar chords. He was charged with violence, yet gave back to communities, spoke openly about depression, and urged his young fans to read, to think, to feel . He was a contradiction — not in spite of his pain, but because of it.
What made X unsettling wasn’t just the aggression. It was the honesty. He didn’t pretend to be healed. He showed you the scar tissue in real time. Albums like 17 and ? weren’t just projects — they were audio therapy sessions for a generation that had been told to suppress everything. Songs like "Jocelyn Flores" and "Everybody Dies in Their Nightmares" gave language to numbness. "Sad!" became an anthem not because it glorified misery, but because it admitted it.