He sang our pain: Remembering Chester Bennington on his 8th death anniversary | The Business Standard
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TUESDAY, JULY 22, 2025
He sang our pain: Remembering Chester Bennington on his 8th death anniversary

Splash

Tahsin Samin
20 July, 2025, 09:20 pm
Last modified: 21 July, 2025, 04:26 pm

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He sang our pain: Remembering Chester Bennington on his 8th death anniversary

Tahsin Samin
20 July, 2025, 09:20 pm
Last modified: 21 July, 2025, 04:26 pm
Chester Bennington and Chris Cornell performed together at Projekt Revolution tour at the Susquehanna Bank Center, New Jersey on 19 July 2008. Photo: Collected
Chester Bennington and Chris Cornell performed together at Projekt Revolution tour at the Susquehanna Bank Center, New Jersey on 19 July 2008. Photo: Collected

Eight years have passed since Chester Bennington left this world yet his voice continues to echo through our headphones, our speakers and our hearts.

Today (20 July) marks not only his death anniversary but also the birthday of his close friend and fellow musician Chris Cornell. Both men were taken by the same cruel enemy.

The pain of this date still feels unbearable to many of us who grew up screaming Linkin Park lyrics into pillows or who found comfort in Chester's words when nothing else helped. He was more than a rock star. He was a lifeline.

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On 20 July 2017, Chester Bennington was found dead in his home in California. The world mourned, shocked by the loss of a man whose music had helped so many survive. Known for his searing vocals and painfully honest lyrics, Chester often sang about the struggles he lived with every day. And yet his death served as a painful reminder that even those who speak out the loudest can still be fighting silent battles.

He died on the birthday of Chris Cornell, the legendary voice behind Soundgarden and Audioslave. Cornell had died just two months earlier. Chester had performed at his funeral. Two icons gone in the same tragic way. It felt like lightning had struck twice.

For fans of Linkin Park, Chester's music was more than entertainment. It was therapy. Songs like Breaking the Habit, Crawling, Heavy and One More Light addressed pain, anxiety and isolation with a rawness that few artists dared to show.


"I don't like my mind right now, Stacking up problems that are so unnecessary" 

"I don't know what's worth fighting for/ Or why I have to scream" 


These weren't just lyrics. They were cries for help, confessions of a man trying to keep going. And for countless fans, they were the words they could not say out loud. Through Chester, they felt seen. Yet Chester was not just his pain.

Offstage, he was warm and laughing. He had tattoos and dad jokes, a ball of chaotic energy who danced backstage and screamed with all his soul onstage. Those who met him remember his kindness. His bandmates and friends recall his humour, his empathy and his willingness to listen. He was someone who tried. He sought therapy. He stayed open about his struggles. He poured everything into his music.

Once in an interview, he said, "I came to a point in my life where I was like, I can either just give up and die or I can fight for what I want." He chose to fight. For years, his voice helped others do the same.

Chester's death highlighted what many still struggle to accept that mental illness can affect anyone regardless of fame or fortune. Depression does not always look like sadness. It can wear a smile. It can sing, perform, and light up rooms. And it still needs support, compassion and care.

The impact of Chester's loss extended far beyond music charts. Social media filled with stories from fans who credited him with saving their lives. Even today, the comments on Linkin Park's YouTube videos are not about nostalgia. They are about survival.


"I'm holding on, Why is everything so heavy?" 

"The little things give you away" 

"I wanna heal, I wanna feel what I thought was never real" 


These lines continue to echo through time. They are reminders that expressing pain is not weakness. That healing starts by speaking. That we are not alone.

Mental health remains a global issue. The World Health Organization estimates that one person dies by suicide every 40 seconds. Most do not leave behind platinum records. Many never speak at all. The stigma is still real.

Chester's legacy pushes us to challenge that silence. If Chester were alive today, he might still be writing songs about those battles. He might still be on tour, telling fans they mattered. His music continues that mission. Every time One More Light plays, it reminds us to care.


"Who cares if one more light goes out? Well, I do" 


So today, on this heavy and bittersweet anniversary, let us remember Chester not with silence, but with music, conversation and love.

Chester Bennington didn't just sing about pain. He gave us the strength to survive it. And that's what we owe him, which is to keep surviving, to keep screaming the lyrics, and to never give up!

 Rest in peace, Chester. We still hear you.

In the views / Chester Bennington / Chris Cornell / death anniversary / Linkin Park

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