“SHOULD’VE BEEN A COWBOY” DIDN’T JUST MAKE PEOPLE SING ALONG. IT MADE THEM MISS A LIFE THEY NEVER EVEN LIVED. That’s what Toby Keith understood better than most, because the song was never really about cowboys, not in the literal sense, it was about something people felt before they could fully explain it—a life that seemed wide open, where the road didn’t end too quickly, where choices still felt reversible, where time hadn’t started closing in yet; and when that song first played, it didn’t sound like nostalgia, it sounded like possibility, like something still ahead, something you could still become if you just kept going a little further; but years pass in ways people don’t always notice, and one day, that same song comes back on, and it doesn’t land the same way anymore, because now it carries something else with it, not just the dream, but the distance from it; and maybe that’s why it stays with people, because it doesn’t just remind them of who they were, it quietly asks them to face everything that came after, all the roads taken, all the ones left behind, and the version of life that will always live somewhere just out of reach.
Why “Should’ve Been a Cowboy” Still Hits So Hard After All These Years There are country songs people remember because they were big. There are country songs people respect because…