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Cone of Shame Lyrics
I'd like to peel the skin off
This winter day
I'd like to burn the hair off
This summer fling
What love can do when love's lost
Grow overweight
And smile as if
There's nothing left to say
Wear the cone of shame
Town is quiet now
Like it's holding its breath
Stone marks the spot
You know who you are
They outlined it in chalk
Word to the wise
And the barman calls time
I'd like to peel your skin off
So I can see what you really think
Or if there is anything
Under that cone of shame
I'd like to strip the bone off
So I can see how you're really made
And see how you really take
Your special pleasure
I'd like to pull your wings off
Read your lines like a gypsy
Just as lonely as anything
So infinite
Cone of shame covering all
You're only happy when you're pissing me off
Cone of shame covering all
I'm only happy when I'm pissing you off
This winter day
I'd like to burn the hair off
This summer fling
Grow overweight
And smile as if
There's nothing left to say
Wear the cone of shame
Like it's holding its breath
Stone marks the spot
You know who you are
They outlined it in chalk
Word to the wise
And the barman calls time
So I can see what you really think
Or if there is anything
Under that cone of shame
So I can see how you're really made
And see how you really take
Your special pleasure
Read your lines like a gypsy
Just as lonely as anything
So infinite
You're only happy when you're pissing me off
Cone of shame covering all
I'm only happy when I'm pissing you off
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(part 1)
"Cone of Shame" is a character study, a familiar Faith No More approach. This one is about two people who bring out the worst in each other. The lyrics use physical mutilation as a way to talk about emotional exposure, resentment, and the urge to pry into a partner's hidden motives. The violence is symbolic, showing how raw it feels to seek truth from someone distant.
"I'd like to peel the skin off this winter day / I'd like to burn the hair off this summer fling" - The narrator wants to strip away everything superficial. Skin and hair are thin layers. "Winter day" and "summer fling" point to larger experiences/memories over time. He believes the surface lies and wants to explore beneath it.
"What love can do when love's lost / Grow overweight" - This is bitterness building up. "Overweight" could metaphorically mean emotional mass that keeps accumulating because nothing has been resolved. Or literally, people often let themselves go once a partnership becomes unhappy but complacent. Flaws also become more noticeable than in the honeymoon phase.
"And smile as if there's nothing left to say / Wear the cone of shame" - The cone signals injury and restraint. Something has gone wrong, and someone is walking around with a visible mark, while maintaining a smile. In a relationship context, the cone is whatever humiliation, guilt, or resentment either person carries after things sour.
"Town is quiet now, like it's holding its breath" - This feels like the aftermath of a falling out or fight. It’s the tense quiet after an incident, not a peaceful one. "Stone marks the spot / You know who you are"- Feels like blame to me. A gravestone or memorial fits the mood. A relationship can leave the same kind of mark when it dies. "They outlined it in chalk" - Evocative image of a crime scene. Something ended violently, whether physically or emotionally. "Word to the wise" - A cautionary line to anyone listening, as if to say, "If you're smart, take notice of what's happened to me so it doesn't happen to you." "And the barman calls time" - Closing time in a bar or pub, where folks often go to drown their sorrows. The world winds down while he stays stuck in the fallout. The night is over, the incident is over, and now there's a forced pause. Everyone has to leave, but he's still picking at the wound. Life moves on, but he hasn't.
(continued)
[Edit: added "part 1" to the top]
(part 2)
(part 2)
Then the song kicks into something more personal and invasive, using violent imagery to make its point. "I'd like to peel your skin off so I can see what you really think" - The narrator doesn't trust the other person's words or behavior, and has become obsessed. He wants evidence, convinced the truth is buried. "Or if there is anything under that cone of shame" - This raises the question of whether the other person has any depth at all. The cone becomes a mask that hides emptiness. "I'd like to strip the bone off so I can see how you're...
Then the song kicks into something more personal and invasive, using violent imagery to make its point. "I'd like to peel your skin off so I can see what you really think" - The narrator doesn't trust the other person's words or behavior, and has become obsessed. He wants evidence, convinced the truth is buried. "Or if there is anything under that cone of shame" - This raises the question of whether the other person has any depth at all. The cone becomes a mask that hides emptiness. "I'd like to strip the bone off so I can see how you're really made" - When skin isn't enough, he wants the skeletal structure. In metaphor, this means he wants to understand their core motives, not their outward behavior or polite face. "And see how you really take your special pleasure" - Elsewhere, this would suggest sexual curiosity. Here, it's about control and power. He wants access to their private side, to see if they enjoy torturing him. "I'd like to pull your wings off" - Classic image of someone plucking an insect’s wings to see how it reacts. Curiosity mixed with cruelty. "Read your lines like a gypsy" - Like a palm reader, he examines the other person, trying to divine their inner motives. "Just as lonely as anything / So infinite" - The first conclusion from this "reading". The other person is as isolated, incomplete, or emotionally barren as he feels. The loneliness feels vast, overwhelming, and permanent.
And finally, "Cone of shame comin' right off / You're only happy when you're pissing me off / I'm only happy when I'm pissing you off". That couplet about sums it up, doesn't it? The relationship is not just violent in one direction. Both people feed off conflict, the only spark left, the only thing they still share. It also explains the earlier imagery. The peeling, stripping, and prying are exaggerated ways of saying, "We only feel alive when hurting each other or forcing reactions."
Hell of a post break-up song for someone who's endured a toxic relationship without much closure. It captures the fascination, resentment, and obsession that linger after someone toxic is gone. It's not about reconciliation, but about processing the anger, the curiosity about what was really going on, and the realization that both parties fed into the cycle.