Vampires don't live in the forest. They live in Castles. Grant it, the castle could be in the forest, but for the sake of the arguement, this one doesn't. They were created in old times when most people couldn't afford to eat well, and they can. Jealousy blah, blah, they whole "blood sucking" thing comes from how Counts and Dukes suck the life out of people. I'm not entirely sure, but it is deffinately something along those lines. I don't remember what my teacher said exactly.
Anyway, this song is deffinately about confronting your past, or at least, I can really see it being like that.
"Your father was a pervert
Face down in the dirt
He taught you how to hurt"
I get impression that she was abused. Sexually, physically, and emotionally.
"Your sister pours the gasoline
I'll fix your meals
while your burns heal!"
[The person he's singing about]'s sister was obviously abused as well. Pouring the gasoline means getting ready to destroy your past, forget about it and to never look back.
"If I let where I'm from burn I can never return!"
He confronted the problem of the past instead of running away from it, I guess. I'm not entirely sure about it. But I think it's something like that.
I hope that makes sense, and you can see how it ties into Confronting your past.
"'If I let where I'm from burn I can never return!'
He confronted the problem of the past instead of running away from it, I guess. I'm not entirely sure about it. But I think it's something like that."
"'If I let where I'm from burn I can never return!'
He confronted the problem of the past instead of running away from it, I guess. I'm not entirely sure about it. But I think it's something like that."
I think what they were going for was more along the lines of running away, and not being able to come back. If the "burning" going on in this song refers to just metaphorically setting fire to the past, a.k.a. running away without confronting it, then they can't go back to that place, whether it's a physical or...
I think what they were going for was more along the lines of running away, and not being able to come back. If the "burning" going on in this song refers to just metaphorically setting fire to the past, a.k.a. running away without confronting it, then they can't go back to that place, whether it's a physical or mental state.
One way of seeing it is pure embarrassment, not being able to return because you were a coward. I also look at it was being too far gone. Once you've set the flames and you let it burn to the ground, you just can't go back. It's too late to confront what you could've before.
Too brokenspoons,
Vampires don't live in the forest. They live in Castles. Grant it, the castle could be in the forest, but for the sake of the arguement, this one doesn't. They were created in old times when most people couldn't afford to eat well, and they can. Jealousy blah, blah, they whole "blood sucking" thing comes from how Counts and Dukes suck the life out of people. I'm not entirely sure, but it is deffinately something along those lines. I don't remember what my teacher said exactly.
Anyway, this song is deffinately about confronting your past, or at least, I can really see it being like that. "Your father was a pervert Face down in the dirt He taught you how to hurt"
I get impression that she was abused. Sexually, physically, and emotionally.
"Your sister pours the gasoline I'll fix your meals while your burns heal!"
[The person he's singing about]'s sister was obviously abused as well. Pouring the gasoline means getting ready to destroy your past, forget about it and to never look back.
"If I let where I'm from burn I can never return!" He confronted the problem of the past instead of running away from it, I guess. I'm not entirely sure about it. But I think it's something like that.
I hope that makes sense, and you can see how it ties into Confronting your past.
"'If I let where I'm from burn I can never return!' He confronted the problem of the past instead of running away from it, I guess. I'm not entirely sure about it. But I think it's something like that."
"'If I let where I'm from burn I can never return!' He confronted the problem of the past instead of running away from it, I guess. I'm not entirely sure about it. But I think it's something like that."
I think what they were going for was more along the lines of running away, and not being able to come back. If the "burning" going on in this song refers to just metaphorically setting fire to the past, a.k.a. running away without confronting it, then they can't go back to that place, whether it's a physical or...
I think what they were going for was more along the lines of running away, and not being able to come back. If the "burning" going on in this song refers to just metaphorically setting fire to the past, a.k.a. running away without confronting it, then they can't go back to that place, whether it's a physical or mental state. One way of seeing it is pure embarrassment, not being able to return because you were a coward. I also look at it was being too far gone. Once you've set the flames and you let it burn to the ground, you just can't go back. It's too late to confront what you could've before.
I don't know, that's just my two cents.