Wow, so aside from the horrible grammar, atrocious spelling, narrow-minded lack of analysis, and feeble attempts at shorthand and acronyms the song has some great comments...oh wait. It's called SongMEANINGS. Not Song "let me talk out of my ass for a good three sentences, which is what my third grade teacher just taught me makes up a paragraph, so I'll sound smart" Please keep the comments related to YOUR OWN opinion of THE SONG. Not whether it warrants an advisory sticker, not how great my speakers are when they're outside of your ass, not how wrong the last guy that posted is, not how it relates to other bands, and not how the band sucks now cause they sold out and their fans suck and whatever the hell else you fucks can find to bitch about. SHUT UP AND INTERPRET.
That said, here's my take on it.....
The idea of an active personality disorder comes to mind. Certain sections in his cognitive thought "places in my mind" reserved for the different... characters, if you will "that space which 'you' call 'mine'"
After the first chorus, the 'normal' mind seems to come out for a bit in confusion, wondering what happened to him, scared that the 'broken' or 'crazy' mind has been gaining more and more control. All this, mind you, while still understanding that without |whatever circumstance that brought about the fragmentation| he wouldn't be where he is today. Understanding, also, that his mind broke under stress, and had to or it would be completely lost (speaking of completely lost, I'm at the "Selling myself for my own life" part). And even if "I" never saw "you" again, or if the broken mind never resurfaced, the possibility would always still be there, until he died. "I won't let you walk away without hearing what I have to say" An attempt at justification, explanation from the broken mind to the sane mind that 'mustn't be ignored, has to be understood' or something to that effect.
Keep in mind this is one man's opinion, whether it's right or wrong, it certainly took a lot more analysis than the last three pages of stupid. (Excluding anyone who actually made an attempt to interpret. Kudos to those guys)
Wow, so aside from the horrible grammar, atrocious spelling, narrow-minded lack of analysis, and feeble attempts at shorthand and acronyms the song has some great comments...oh wait. It's called SongMEANINGS. Not Song "let me talk out of my ass for a good three sentences, which is what my third grade teacher just taught me makes up a paragraph, so I'll sound smart" Please keep the comments related to YOUR OWN opinion of THE SONG. Not whether it warrants an advisory sticker, not how great my speakers are when they're outside of your ass, not how wrong the last guy that posted is, not how it relates to other bands, and not how the band sucks now cause they sold out and their fans suck and whatever the hell else you fucks can find to bitch about. SHUT UP AND INTERPRET.
That said, here's my take on it.....
The idea of an active personality disorder comes to mind. Certain sections in his cognitive thought "places in my mind" reserved for the different... characters, if you will "that space which 'you' call 'mine'" After the first chorus, the 'normal' mind seems to come out for a bit in confusion, wondering what happened to him, scared that the 'broken' or 'crazy' mind has been gaining more and more control. All this, mind you, while still understanding that without |whatever circumstance that brought about the fragmentation| he wouldn't be where he is today. Understanding, also, that his mind broke under stress, and had to or it would be completely lost (speaking of completely lost, I'm at the "Selling myself for my own life" part). And even if "I" never saw "you" again, or if the broken mind never resurfaced, the possibility would always still be there, until he died. "I won't let you walk away without hearing what I have to say" An attempt at justification, explanation from the broken mind to the sane mind that 'mustn't be ignored, has to be understood' or something to that effect.
Keep in mind this is one man's opinion, whether it's right or wrong, it certainly took a lot more analysis than the last three pages of stupid. (Excluding anyone who actually made an attempt to interpret. Kudos to those guys)