I always thought it was about someone with a split personality/multiple personalities and is maybe also about drugs. Or about how something/someone makes him a different person.
Look at me, can you tell, by the way I move into my head?
The way he goes into his other persona : via drugs, or maybe saying that there is no visible signs of when he's changing, it just happens.
He's just confused about who he really is because there's a constant battle going on in his mind. He doesn't know which one is the real him. And this explains all the different lyrics, to me anyway.
Do you think that it's me, or...?
It's not me.
(That's how I view those lyrics, instead of one sentence.)
I don't even care, I'm alive:
He doesn't care which is him, because, although there are two people within him, they're both still him, and all that matters is that he's still living. Unless it means that he doesn't care which is the real, because, despite using drugs, he's alive and that's all that matters.
Personal experiences have shaped my opinions on the interpretation of this song.
For the longest time, I could attach myself to anyone, and I could only listen to music and get that feeling, you know, the most amazing feeling on earth. "...a power as great as love."
Anyway, and before I met my...(cliche, I know) soulmate, I always would just keep to myself, in my head. It was just me and it felt like there was two of me. Anthropomorphic fallacy/ pathetic fallacy is where you attach a personality and emotions to an inanimate object. I did it to myself. I became attached to myself, because I had no one else, and I gave my own self two sets of emotions, and two personalities. It was the weirdest thing ever to not know how many people lived in your head.
I always thought it was about someone with a split personality/multiple personalities and is maybe also about drugs. Or about how something/someone makes him a different person.
Look at me, can you tell, by the way I move into my head?
The way he goes into his other persona : via drugs, or maybe saying that there is no visible signs of when he's changing, it just happens. He's just confused about who he really is because there's a constant battle going on in his mind. He doesn't know which one is the real him. And this explains all the different lyrics, to me anyway.
Do you think that it's me, or...? It's not me. (That's how I view those lyrics, instead of one sentence.)
I don't even care, I'm alive:
He doesn't care which is him, because, although there are two people within him, they're both still him, and all that matters is that he's still living. Unless it means that he doesn't care which is the real, because, despite using drugs, he's alive and that's all that matters.
Personal experiences have shaped my opinions on the interpretation of this song. For the longest time, I could attach myself to anyone, and I could only listen to music and get that feeling, you know, the most amazing feeling on earth. "...a power as great as love." Anyway, and before I met my...(cliche, I know) soulmate, I always would just keep to myself, in my head. It was just me and it felt like there was two of me. Anthropomorphic fallacy/ pathetic fallacy is where you attach a personality and emotions to an inanimate object. I did it to myself. I became attached to myself, because I had no one else, and I gave my own self two sets of emotions, and two personalities. It was the weirdest thing ever to not know how many people lived in your head.