Jordan Anthony and Chloé Caroline’s “Existing” is a love song that removes drama and replaces it with timing, the quiet shock of realizing someone is alive at the same time as you. The central line, “I love living in a world where you’re existing,” sets the frame early, this is not about pursuit or loss, but about coincidence elevated to meaning. Built on a piano foundation that carries both pop clarity and cinematic weight, the song positions their voices as parallel lines that meet without forcing it.
What drives the song is the balance between scale and intimacy. The arrangement leans toward expansive, with violin lines lifting the chorus into something close to anthem, yet the core idea remains almost fragile, a single sentence that could disappear if overexplained. Jordan Anthony’s delivery pushes outward, full-bodied and declarative, while Chloé Caroline holds closer, her phrasing more contained, as if protecting the thought rather than projecting it. That contrast creates a dynamic where the song grows in size without losing its center. The more it opens, the more it risks turning a private realization into a shared statement, and the performance walks that line carefully, never letting the emotion flatten into generality.






