Lyric discussion by AidanDies 

I don't know anything about Guided By Voices, just discovered them, but I love this one. I think the tree's an analogy of himself.

"I am a tree - I show my age when I don't cry I have the leaves that will fall off when wind blows by Don't strip off my bark - I have been stripped of it before Yesterday's gone and tomorrow has so much more in store"

By not crying he shows that he's more mature, but even something as gentle (or tough, in some situations) as the wind can blow parts of him off. He's been hurt by having his bark stripped, and yet he looks forwards to the future [or is possibly just convincing himself, see below...]

"You are a bird - you're taking off in every way Say the last word until there is nothing more to say"

I love the first one, someone he wants to say is leaving him. I'm not sure about the say the last word line. Perhaps saying that she's leaving because there isn't now nor was there ever anything to say?

"Don't interrupt - you know the squirrels are my friends Get off my limb - for I will break before I bend"

He tries to convince himself that he wants the squirrels as friends. The next line I'm not sure if he's referring to the bird (the girl) or the squirrels (the friends he tries to comfort himself with, knowing they aren't what he wants). If the bird, it's saying that even if she tries to help him, he'll break before he bends to help, even though he wants it. If it's the squirrels, he's telling them that they can't help it, and meaning it.

"I'm planning to see I'm planning to feel you all over me So climb up my trunk and build on your nest Come and get the sap out if me I am a tree! Fruitless and free! No symmetry! Touch me and see!"

riserius1 said that it seemed like a sexual analogy, and here is where it would seem so. But I have three interpretations. From least likely to most likely in my opinion: 1) He gives himself over and starts having sex with anyone to try and comfort himself. 2) He continues being hopeful, and that one day he will have sex with the girl (the bird). 3) It's not sexual, he simply wants her to keep trying to bend him; to get the sap, the knowledge, out of him. Perhaps to prove that he does in fact have symmetry (or beauty).

"I am a tree - counting my rings will do no good I won't live long but I would be with you if I could When you take flight, remember me to one who lives there Since you have flown, there's something special in the air"

And here he finally returns to ridding himself of his false hope. He wants to be with her, but says he cannot. He hopes that the bird will remember him and tell of him to whomever she meets. And my favorite line; the last one. I love this so much, at first I was thinking something in the air, like a feeling or such, and he was still hopeful. Then I connected it with the bird: since she is in the air, there is something special in it. He doesn't feel bitter towards her, and still considers her beautiful, but there's sadly nothing he can say about it. It's even better, as when she has flown is the same time as when she left him. Gah, I love that so much.

*"Someone he wants to sTay is leaving him.".

And on the bird bending him, I meant that he would in fact be bent, but wants her to persevere; not that he would break.

And at the end, it also seems as if he's happy for her, or taking comfort in memory, instead of just being bitter. He's just enlightened of his false hopes, it seems.

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