I think this is about a common relantioship between a boy and a girl. He wants her to be pretty, thin, to always smile to him, and to be the kind of conservative girl who'd take him to meet her parents. He thinks he deserves this because he has money, and, because of this, she acts as he wants, but this only makes her some kind of whore.
She knows she's only acting, lying, and that she could tell the truth, but she's scared that, if she did it, he'd turn violent. He'd answer not with words, but with his baseball bat, and even if he did only talk to her, it'd be words full of hatred, dedicated to dominate her. His violent reaction would make her belong to him, as if she was some kind of object, where he could mark his initials.
The children's song in the beginning seems to show the way women are forced to stay forever in some kind of fake childhood, unable to grow up and decide for themselves. Even when they're old, they have to depend on someone and act innocent, even thought they're mature enough to live their own lives.
I think this is about a common relantioship between a boy and a girl. He wants her to be pretty, thin, to always smile to him, and to be the kind of conservative girl who'd take him to meet her parents. He thinks he deserves this because he has money, and, because of this, she acts as he wants, but this only makes her some kind of whore. She knows she's only acting, lying, and that she could tell the truth, but she's scared that, if she did it, he'd turn violent. He'd answer not with words, but with his baseball bat, and even if he did only talk to her, it'd be words full of hatred, dedicated to dominate her. His violent reaction would make her belong to him, as if she was some kind of object, where he could mark his initials.
The children's song in the beginning seems to show the way women are forced to stay forever in some kind of fake childhood, unable to grow up and decide for themselves. Even when they're old, they have to depend on someone and act innocent, even thought they're mature enough to live their own lives.