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Jimmy Eat World – A Sunday Lyrics 23 years ago
Jimmy Eat World are extremely gifted not only for their musical talent but for their ability to write deep meaning ful lyrics. In this particular song, I think Jim (or whoever it may be) is speaking very metaphorically here.

Although he's drving back from some sort of social event, when he speaks of "driving" it's mainly his thought process. It is very apparent there has been a breakup with a girl at this event and he's now leaving the scene. However when I look at this particular lyric:

On a Sunday she thought it through.
Now as I drive back, there's thiry-six less hours I have to change the course I send myself.
Live with that.

"Drive back" is the writer distancing himself from something. What I'm saying here is that it could be something as deep as marriage. To me, he and his fiance split ways 36 hours before they're about to wed. When he says that's "36 less hours i have to change the course i send myself", means that that's 36 less hours he has to prepare and spend time on his wedding. The course he's speaking of his life and how things would have been different had he made the comittment. As he's driving away from the life he could have had, he begins to question if what he did was right:

Because when the rides done, the hopes that you have carried, they fall out from your hands back to the ground.
Live with that.

He knows all the hopes that he's carried for so long, now have to be let go, and he's knows once he loosens his grip on them, he will in all probability, never see them again. As time goes by, he begins to realize that eveything will in turn sort itself out:

Learn as the drugs leave.
Learn as you lose it.
You will.

The "drugs" he's speaking of are not literally drugs. I think they're emotions, butterflies, all the chemicals that have been swirling around in his brain. He's confused and as time passes he slowly sorts things out and as he does, all the emotions slowly fade away and things have become much clearer for him as noted in the last (and my favorite) lyric:

The haze clears from your eyes on a Sunday.

The "haze" was his blindness to the choice he made and as time passed the "haze" slowly lifted and he was able to understand what he had done and now is prepared to face any consequences that may arise from it.

Like I said, this is just my personal interpretation and is probably way off of what Jim was trying to imply when he wrote it. In any case, this is how I see the song, and no matter what the true meaning of the song is, it is definetly still the best on Clarity and perhaps the best Jimmy Eat World song to date.


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Something Corporate – Cavanaugh Park Lyrics 23 years ago
This song should not only be noted for the musical aspects, but for the underlying themes presented in the song. Take for instance the quote below:

At Cavanaugh Park
Where you used to take me
To play in the sand
And said to me, "Son, one day you'll be a man.
"And men can do terrible things."

Andrew (or whoever it is) is still young boy totally oblivious to the world around him and still has his childhood innocence. His dad is warning him that in life there is change and no matter how cute and innocent someone is when they're young, it does little to provide the foundation for who they become as seen in the next quote.

At Cavanaugh Park
We used to get high
Watching teams as they fought
They loved my friend Adam
But he always got caught
Man, that kid made fucking up look cool
Aren't we all so cool now? No

Andrew has now grown up and comes back to the park, somewhat aware of how the real world is. He's smoking up and getting in trouble and at the time he thought it was cool. Then the retorical question at the end of this verse plus the whole next one (At Cavanaugh Park/
Where I used to think/ That my life would be good) suggests he's grown up even more and realizes the dumb choices he has made in the past.

Throughout it all, Cavanaugh Park has been his refuge, his place for him to be solitary, alone with just his thoughts. Although Andrew is constantly changing, the park doesn't and remains there, all the while watching Andrew as he maturing and realizing the world is a pretty screwed up place. Although he has tried to do what is right, it is always deemed wrong somehow by society and he nows wonders if there ever is that "perfect life".

Cavanaugh park is a kick-ass song and Something Corporate are extremely gifted not only for their musical talent but for the ability to write deep meaningful lyrics.

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