Evil S I yes to find a shore
A beach that doesn't quiver anymore
Where we could crush some plants to paint my walls
And I won't try to fight in the weekend wars

Was I? I was to lazy to bathe
Or paint or write or try to make a change
Now I can shoot a gun to kill my lunch
And I don't have to love or think too much

Instant battle plans written on the sidewalk
Mental mystics in a twisted metal car
Tried to amplify the sound of light and love

Christ is cursed of faders and maders
Might even take a knife to split a hair
Or even scare the children off my lawn
Giving us time to make the makeshift bombs

Every mess invested was a score
We couldn't use computers anymore
It's difficult to win unless you're bored
And you might have to plan for the weekend wars

Try to break my heart I'll drive to Arizona
It might take one hundred years to grow an arm
I'll sit and listen to the sound of sand and cold

Twisted diamond heart, I'm the weekend warrior
My predictions are the only things I have
I can amplify the sound and light and love

I'm a curse and I'm a sound
When I open up my mouth
There's a reason I don't win
I don't know how to begin


Lyrics submitted by seldomburn

Weekend Wars song meanings
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    General Comment

    "Weekend Warrior" IS common slang for someone who has responsibilities during the week, but gets high/drunk/otherwise smashed on the weekend. That was what I heard when I listened to the song. Anyone who has ever REALLY messed themselves up with drugs can identify with the sort of primal, insane world inhabited while hallucinating and whatnot. A really bad trip FEELS like a post-apocalytic kind of place to be. Responsible people - those who don't just want to be drop out junkies...have to "plan for the weekend wars" VERY carefully to avoid ruining the rest of their lives. That's not to say there isn't more than one meaning.

    If they have ever used drugs, of course that will color their entire world-view, whether they mean for it to influence their music or not, it does. I giggle a little when people say "but they say The Handshake isn't about drugs!" Yeah, the Beatles swore that "Lucy in the Sky" wasn't about acid, too. It's obviously referencing a selling out experience as well.

    It's a mark of true genius when a writer can make a song with two or even three or four meanings, all of which fit.

    Crystalline888on March 19, 2012   Link

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