| Streetlight Manifesto – Point/Counterpoint Lyrics | 15 years ago |
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Whew. This is gonna be a long one, but I think P/CP needs it. Taking this line by line. To summarize in one sentence, this song is a guy who once thought life was worthless, but changed his mind after a gang-related near death experience and is now trying to convince a girl (his girlfriend?) not to commit suicide. ==Refrain: A flashback to the gang warfare incident changing his perspective on life.== >>i've got a gun in my hand but that gun won't cock my finger's on the trigger but that trigger seems locked and i can't stop staring at the tick tock clock and even if i could i would never give up The narrator has been wounded in an incident of gang violence, and was left for dead. He's still alive, but contemplating suicide to end it all - and yet finding himself unable to do it. He will never give up. >>with a vest on my chest and a bullet in my lung i can't believe i'm dying with my song unsung Seeing as the narrator is very likely in his late teens or early twenties, he probably has the typical feeling of invincibility, hammering home his surprise that he was shot through his vest - teaching the narrator the surprisingly fragile nature of life. >>so if and when i die won't you bury me alone? because i'll never get to heaven if i'm singing this song: These lines are a bit odd, and I'm not sure of any one interpretation. I think the soundest way to interpret it is that he feels compelled to stop anyone from taking their life, and this is more important than heaven itself to him. ==Verse: the narrator trying to talk the girl out of suicide. The liner notes for one of the CD's (lost my hard copies atm) said something about this being planned as a boy/girl duet, and I'll interpret it at such.== >>if there was something wrong would you be oh so strong? would you do what it takes to move this hollow life along? The narrator starts by asking, point blank: Do you agree life is worth living, even if it is 'hollow'? >>i'd like to think i would, you know i'd like to think i would but i guarantee that what you see is not reality The girl responds that she'd like to think that, but her life has unknowable (to the narrator) depths of anguish that make it not-so-straightforward. >>and every time i make a point she makes a counterpoint Self-explanatory - this is a full out argument they are having. >>she said it's easy but in the end you'll have no choice Girl's line. 'It' is staying alive but it's ultimately impossible to continue living her life. >>and you know that's only just the way it goes Narrator. He's saying that life is sometimes hard and it's something you have to accept. >>(you said it right man, that is just the way it goes) They both agree, at least, that life can be difficult - they disagree only on the right response to a difficult life. >>and the days, and the days they seem like forever and the days, and the days they seem like forever The girl. Already, it is a long, suffering slog to go through every day. >>but forever isn't ever enough Narrator responding that every second of life is precious, and that there's so much to do that there's no such thing as a too-long lived life. >>i'd like to sing a song (please swear you won't be long) Narrator asking for a chance to convince her, with the girl agreeing on condition that it doesn't prolong her suffering. >>i'll try not to be long but i don't want to get this story wrong Self explanatory. >>there was a kid who never cared about the little things Narrator beginning to share his story. >>don't even bother because i'm tired and i'm sick of it The girl is already dismissive - clearly she is fairly set on the idea of suicide. [Refrain] >>oh, you don't know where i've been oh, you don't know what i've seen Narrator. The girl is lamenting her hardships, but as he's been shot before and she hasn't, he feels she would similarly change from such an experience. >>if i did something right would you give up this fight? would you say you were wrong and maybe someone else was kind of right? This line tripped me up for a while. I think the best way to look at it is the girl speaking, "You're trying to run my life. But what if I really am making the right decision?" >>i'd like to think you would you know i'd like to think you would but i can't guarantee that what you get is an apology The narrator responds that, while he'd like to let her trust herself, he can't accept that he was wrong that she should keep living (and so would not apologize for saying suicide is the wrong idea.) >>jump back to the day we met i never thought that it would end this way if ever i let you down i want to ask of you to take it down a notch and we can talk it on through Apparently, the girl was much different when the narrator met her. He's pleading that, while he may not be the best friend (I also think this strongly supports the idea they are boyfriend/girlfriend) that suicide is not the answer, and she should 'take it down a notch.' [Refrain] ==Verse: This verse is much, much different, and threw me off from this songs meaning for quite a while. This verse is the narrator convincing someone else out of suicide - not the girl, but a member of the gang he was once a part of. The narrator is, in essence, describing the time that convinced him life was worth living by phrasing it as a possibility for the gang member.== >>so tell me friend: how's it going to end? when the shit goes down and there's no one left around to get your back Narrator asking the gang member, "you feel invincible now with your bulletproof vest, but what happens when it's shot through and you're left alone?" >>you'll crack you'll smile and agree with everything they say they'll try to tell you that it's all okay 'They' refers to paramedics here. While gang members are generally expected to keep a tough front, you can't keep that up in the face of true death. >>but it's not and you're shot and you're bleeding pretty bad and you can't stop thinking about the things you never had like a wife and a kid and the things you never did you're running around you're living a life that's empty in the end, my friend This is the turning point, in a nutshell. When you realize you might be about to lose your life from gang violence, you realize that your life was a wasted one that's 'empty in the end'. >>oh, you'll take back all you've said oh, when the regrets fill your head For all of the bluster of brotherhood and gang pride, that's not a fulfilling life to lead. >>trust me i've been there before Support that the 'advice' is in fact the narrator relating his life story. >>i would not wish it upon my greatest enemy what irony I'm not totally sure this is irony, but it makes enough sense as a line. Even after being shot by the other gang members, he would not wish the same upon them. >>once friends, but i find: you'll have to learn this lesson on your own This is another epiphany on the narrators part. Imagine the arguments happening in chronological order. While these gang members were once friends, he realizes that it's up to them to realize life is worth living. And, furthermore, as much as it pains him to admit, it will be up the girl and no one else to decide if she should keep on living. ==Verse: The narrative now cuts back to the narrator and the girl.== >>so i waited by the phone but that phone never rang The narrator has resigned himself to the fact of his girlfriend committing suicide, and while he won't follow her himself (I guarantee that what you'll get is not an apology), he is simply waiting to hear the news she has shot herself. >>and i sang so loud so i wouldn't hear the bang Obviously, he's not referring to physically hearing the actual gunshot. Instead, he's trying to sing his song (which has been referenced numerous times as his message of life's value) to drown out the sorrow of the girl not following it, because that's the only way he can dull the pain and ensure he doesn't think about following her. >>when the bang never came and i never got the call: fuck it! thank you! i love you all! After finally understanding the song the whole way through, I think is is the most beautiful line in the song. She doesn't kill herself, and he's overcome with relief. >>some are going to say that we're doomed to repeat all our past mistakes great but that's not me and even if it was i would always disagree because in the end i always get the better of me This final segment can be imagined as in tandem between the boy and the girl. Both of them thought life was relatively worthless and considered suicide - but both of them learned from their mistakes and are alive, together. <3 |
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