Let me live that fantasy. My friends and I—we've cracked the code. We count our dollars on the train to the party. And everyone who knows us knows that we're fine with this, We didn't come for money.
But every song's like gold teeth, grey goose, trippin' in the bathroom. Come with me Honey-I'm your sweet sugar Candyman. Run like the wind-fly with me to Bountyland. Bite me I'm yours-if you're hungry please understand. This is the end-of the sweet sugar Candyman Oh my love -I know you are my Candyman And all my love -your word is my command Oh my love -I know you are my Candyman And all my love -let us fly to Bountyland Oh my love -I know you are my Candyman And all my love -your word is my command.
Oh my love -I know you are my Candyman. This passage conjures up an image of a person devoid of love and warmth—which has all "bled" out of his "cold little heart.
Per the verse, the narrator might be someone who's fought love before, and he "can't stand" that impulse in himself, because it's actually what he needs. He's addressing another person, who he thinks or is trying to persuade himself has more confidence in their relationship. This verse confirms the idea that up until now, the narrator has never been up to the task of a robust relationship.
In fact, he's caused problems in love before by "playing games," and he knows that this time he's letting someone down again in exactly the same way. The song ends with the most straightforward statement yet about the narrator's shortcomings in relationships: Knowing about his past failures, he's intimidated and isn't confident that he can do better this time around. It's a fatalistic view, uttered by someone who doesn't believe he's ever going to get better at being "strong. Shop Elle.
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