Come down off your throne and leave your body alone
Somebody must change
You are the reason I've been waiting all these years
Somebody holds the key

Well, I'm near the end and I just ain't got the time
And I'm wasted and I can't find my way home

I can't find my way home
But I can't find my way home
But I can't find my way home
But I can't find my way home
Still I can't find my way home

And I've done nothing wrong
But I can't find my way home


Lyrics submitted by fraggles

Can't Find My Way Home Lyrics as written by Steve Winwood

Lyrics © Kobalt Music Publishing Ltd.

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Can't Find My Way Home song meanings
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  • +8
    General Comment

    You guys are waaaaay over thinking these lyrics. You have to consider the context of the period in which they were written. It is about drugs and the wreakage they make of your life. "Come down off your throne" = The grandiosity and the euphoria created by the drugs. "Leave your body alone" = stop taking drugs "Some body must change" = You gotta do what ever it take to man up and take responsibilty for your own addictions "You are the reason/I've been waiting here so long" = I LOVE YOU, J@ck@$$ "Somebody holds the key" = Help! Help! What are the magic words that will penetrate his doped out core?? "But i'm near the end" = I'm near the end "And i just ain't got the time no" = I mean it. I'm near the end. I have a life to live. "Well i'm wasted and I can't find my way home" = in today's lingo it would translate roughly to "Dude, where is my car?" but there is a more urgent cut to it. This person has sacrificed his life(her life). Sort of, 'I have walked this path with you and now we are both lost, and if you don't come out of that drug hazed cloud it will all be for nothing. What a waste of talent/intellect/skill/gift.

    It really is very straight forward.

    PoeMaxon January 10, 2011   Link
  • +5
    My Interpretation

    Warning: This is a spoiler alert for the movie, Fandango....

    This song is subject to many interpretations. I will address just one as it applies to the movie, Fandango. In this context, I believe it about love. Costner's character must accept that the girl he loves and with whom he was once involved is now marrying his close friend. All of his buddies have plans for the future, except him. "Come down on your own, leave your body alone," refers to growing up, ultimately, and leaving behind infatuations and reaching toward your "higher self." His "lust" for the girl must be replaced with a respect and acquiescence to her desire to have a future with another man. I agree with "Longfellow" who commented above..."Wasted, is used more in a destroyed or broken manner." In this case, Costner's youth is "destroyed," by having to face the future as a responsible adult. This song is a multifaceted masterpiece.

    DeadPoetsSocietyon June 15, 2010   Link
  • +4
    General Comment

    Sometimes I listen to this song on repeat on my CD player. And I LOVE playing it on my acoustic guitar while belting it out or singing it soulfully to myself. If I had to pick ONE song that described "my head", THIS WOULD BE IT! I would probably say this is my all-time favorite song at this point in my life.

    NunoInfoon June 08, 2003   Link
  • +3
    General Comment

    no, Stevie Winwood is the vocalist on this one

    jbalanon February 16, 2006   Link
  • +3
    General Comment

    Its already been said but "Well, I'm near the end and I just ain't got the time" says it all to me, its about death. "Come down off your throne and leave your body alone, somebody must change" release from your physical self. "You are the reason I've been waiting so long, somebody holds the key" you are given life not knowing when it will end. "And I'm wasted and I can't find my way home" life has not been what you expected, bad choices, futility of life itself, human condition, meaning of life and what comes after life. Ultimately, home being heaven. Excellent song.

    mythorfacton January 08, 2013   Link
  • +3
    My Interpretation

    This is a song about an alcoholic or drug addict in the late stages of addiction, battling with a voice inside that's telling them to "leave your body alone," and stop killing themselves.

    "Well I'm near the end, and I just ain't got the time" That is the drugs talking, apologizing to the voice of reason and survival, telling that voice that it's too late to change or turn around.

    "Well I'm wasted and I can't find my way home," is total oblivion and being lost in a state of self-loathing, self-pity, and self-destruction. "Home," is a metaphor for safety and self-care.

    I can't believe a kid in his early twenties wrote these lyrics. Songwriting doesn't get more powerful. A frightening precursor to the likes of Kurt Cobain, Elliot Smith and Amy W. It's a cry for help. The help comes from within.

    PatMCon July 22, 2014   Link
  • +1
    General Comment

    good song

    absent124on July 25, 2005   Link
  • +1
    General Comment

    "Eric Clapton sings this, right?"


    The song is by Blind Faith

    Stevie Winwood, Eric Clapton, Ginger Baker, Ric Grech

    manilaboy1vicon November 08, 2006   Link
  • +1
    Song Meaning

    My interpretation is that this song is about a relationship on the edge of breaking up. This is a very intimate song. Listen to how tenderly and sadly he sings it. He's talking to a lover, a partner that he has loved for many years. But there's something seriously wrong.

    (this interpretation works best as a personal letter of angst) Honey,

    I need you to come down off your pedestal for a minute, get off your ego trip, and be a real person for me. And leave your body alone, too. You are beautiful. You don't need to focus on your next hair appointment, body waxing, the cellulite on your legs, your daily workout, or any of it. That's all superficial, anyway. I love you as you are. But one of us, you or me, must change. Because we can't keep going on this way.

    I love you very much, and you are the reason I've stuck with it for this long. But I'm feeling chained down, and one of us holds the key. You either need to change, releasing me to love you, or I'll release myself to love somebody else. But somebody holds the key.

    I'm sorry this isn't more loving and gentle, but I'm reaching the end of my limits. I just don't have the time to keep waiting for you forever.

    I am physically and emotionally drained - I'm wasted. I want a partner who means 'home' to me, and I just can't find my way home with you anymore.

                              Love, ~~~

    A lot of people interpret the word, 'wasted', as being stoned. That is the modern meaning. but it didn't mean that 45 years ago. The traditional definition of wasted is "physically and/or emotionally exhausted".

    Anyway, the second verse goes on from there.

    Hermitageon August 07, 2015   Link
  • +1
    General Comment

    I'm a recovering heroin addict. I'm 4 years clean and sober now. I'm 70 now. I saw them at The Spectrum in Philadelphia 1969. Although Clapton is credited for the lyrics don't be too sure. He's credited for stuff in Cream that Jack Bruce is adamant about having written. It's like Lennon/McCartney. Eric was very headstrong back then and wanted credit for almost everything. I say that because this song is either Eric singing about himself or a plea to Eric from Syevie Windwood

    The Gregoron March 30, 2021   Link

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