Sara’s first words are a statement of intent: she will retell an epiphany she had. She had spent some time in a place called Eden, which represents a suspended state of “eternal happiness” and contains attractive angels. One day, she “landed on a snake’s eyes” and “took a bite,” obviously leading to it “[ending] up bleeding.” But linked to the detail that she met and spoke with a serpent-shaped heart in the garden, the possibility rises that she figuratively took in the perspective of the snake. The snake is wise about the ways of deception, which drives business and pretty much the entire universe. She is grateful for his advice and begins to resent the supposed jolliness of Eden’s pretty, predictable people. The snake’s teachings against the ignorant existence that is happy-go-lucky innocence is appositely phrased his theft of hers, as crime is not the simple evil that it used to be. Nothing is simple anymore, not peace, not wounds. After these conclusions, Eden’s air, with its lethargy and “eternity,” is figuratively asphyxiating and poisoning. She left its “paradise,” as if riding the momentum of the machine-like and steady melody of the song.
Sara’s first words are a statement of intent: she will retell an epiphany she had. She had spent some time in a place called Eden, which represents a suspended state of “eternal happiness” and contains attractive angels. One day, she “landed on a snake’s eyes” and “took a bite,” obviously leading to it “[ending] up bleeding.” But linked to the detail that she met and spoke with a serpent-shaped heart in the garden, the possibility rises that she figuratively took in the perspective of the snake. The snake is wise about the ways of deception, which drives business and pretty much the entire universe. She is grateful for his advice and begins to resent the supposed jolliness of Eden’s pretty, predictable people. The snake’s teachings against the ignorant existence that is happy-go-lucky innocence is appositely phrased his theft of hers, as crime is not the simple evil that it used to be. Nothing is simple anymore, not peace, not wounds. After these conclusions, Eden’s air, with its lethargy and “eternity,” is figuratively asphyxiating and poisoning. She left its “paradise,” as if riding the momentum of the machine-like and steady melody of the song.
@azneel128 It's about her leaving Los Angeles after realizing it wasn't what she expected.
@azneel128 It's about her leaving Los Angeles after realizing it wasn't what she expected.