What does kryptonite song mean
Pleas understand, my love for you is forever adn as strong as I can hate. I can love! Add your reply. I feel as though the song was about a person who got hook on drugs or alcohol and has tried to get off of them but the drugs keep talking to them via their head and trying to convince them to come back or not go at all. They drugs have a very strong hold on them and calls itself Kryptonite because it makes them so weak it's almost impossible to break away without help Like Superman has to have every time kryptonite has him down someone comes to help him and is fighting to stay alive in the person.
It is made to sound like something all can relate to though a super unhealthy relationship and is really trying not to blame anyone but still at the same time is trying to deal with the guilt of the other person getting hooked on the relationship and blaming them and the first person wants to be friends no matter what. But the relationship is the addiction now and therefor the Kryptonite. Because every time they get together they get weak. That's my story and I'm sticking to it.
Scott S. I think it's about the youth and them trying to make a difference in the world. I say this because they are constantly pushed down and tossed aside like they know nothing and can do nothing and are wrong.
The only time the youth is really noticed and their ideals and thoughts are portrayed is when the riot and protest and defy. Aka "the ill go crazy" and the "superhuman might" means that eventually they will push through and become unstoppable and uncontainable. Another example is that the government constantly leans of not just the youth but they are the majority aka "you stumbled in and bumped your head, if not for me you'd be dead".
I thought this song, was about someone who had died, or was about to die. Will I still be your hero even though I gave into my weakness? Write about your feelings and thoughts about Kryptonite Know what this song is about? That was a major inspiration for us, which ended up being the inspiration for the record.
It was putting the goal in our mind to not just make another record, but to make a record we have never made before. You guys have had massive success over the years. Does that make things easier, or does that get in your head? I think to put the success aside, it takes the pressure off of you. I remember the first time I went into the studio, I probably looked like a deer in the headlights.
Everything is so new, and you are so unfamiliar with everything. But, the more times you do it, the more comfortable you are with everything, the more confidence you develop. I think we went into this record with a lot of confidence, and knew that we could do it. Knowing we had the best team to do it, and that we did our work, I can honestly say that we did our best.
I guess the inspiration for that was just my friends. It just asks if I fall down, will you be there for me? They still need you to be there for them. That song is just kind of asking that question. I just used to sit in my algebra class in high school and write songs. That was just one that came out one day. AbsentMinded on June 10, General Comment I think this song is about meeting the unreasonable expectations the world has for us. BTW, speaking of expectations, anyone know when 3DD is coming out with a new album?
BrettMoore on April 24, Link. I think without a doubt the song is about Crystal Meth. Obviously, most people would assume that the song is really about an ex girlfriend and in some ways they are right. Her name is Crystal and "she indeed took his soul to the darkside of the moon". There are numerous references to the drug, foremost being his sense of feeling like he is Superman. In addition," Kryptonite", which crystal meth ultimately becomes to the long term addict.
In addition, when he states "still your secrets I would keep" is the necessity of the addict to keep this addiction under the radar as a result of the bad publicity it has and peoples perception of you can be tarnished People will have no qualms admitting to smoking weed, but crystal The addiction is so powerful, that even though the addict knows that the drug will ultimately lead to insanity, he still wills the desire to hold on to the addiction because it is so intense and inescapable.
The final phrase that most users of this drug would be familiar with, which probably go unnoticed would be "You stumbled in and bumped your head, if Not for me then you would be dead I picked you up and put you back On solid ground". Meth smokers know that as an addict, it messes with your nervous system and addicts often break their pipes, and many often use this as an excuse to quit" but rarely does this feat actually take place".
Yeah, I know a lot about crystal from experience and when I heard this song again after so long it stood out to me. This song is about idolatry. He sees his world go sour i watched the world go to the dark side of the moon because of his idolatry with the girl after all i knew it had to be something to do with you , yet he is unwilling to change it i really dont mind what happens now and then, as long as you Idolatry is something we place in front of God in our lives, and when it is in the form of a relationship, we actually try to act as God for that other person and see ourselves as their savior.
He calls himself her superman, he says he saved her you stumbled in and bumped your head if not for me youd be dead, i picked you up She does not meet the demands of the god-like role he has placed on her you took for granted She is his kryptonite.
Because of the god-like status he has placed on her, he has allowed her existence to suck dry the true God-power that indwelt him, by worshiping the true God. This song parallels well with the story of Samson and Delilah found in the book of Judges, chapters 13 through Our one and only Savior is Jesus Christ. He is who we were created to worship. If it didn't create you it cannot define you, and therefore cannot satisfy you as the object of your worship.
The human race had relationship with God, turned our backs on Him, and became enslaved to worship created things rather than our Creator, at our own misery. Sadly this is not something we can just "turn around" from, because we become stuck to these objects of worship, more powerful than us. Forgiveness is something that is never free.
If I come over to your house and break your lamp, 1 of 2 things can happen: You can demand repayment, or you can forgive me God, chose the latter. He did not leave us in this desperate situation.
He came to earth in the form of man and took the punishment that we deserve for this transgression on Himself by dying on a cross.
Because sin and false worship is the qualification for death, and He did not do that, the grave could not hold Him, He resurrected. Basically, He traded our poor credentials for His glorious credentials. Now, by putting confidence in this act that was done for us, we now may obtain resurrection life in our mortal bodies and begin a process in which we worship the One whom we were created to worship and be transformed into His glorious likeness.
Not by our goodness, but by His. Read more at songmeanings. Idolatry enslaves and leaves us helpless. The human race had relationship with God, turned our backs on Him, and became enslaved to worship created things rather than our Creator, at our own misery, and this plays out in "Spiritual death". He even illustrates this in the song I left my body lying somewhere in the sands of time He obviously didn't physically die if he continues on in the song, this must reference a spiritual death.
He had never heard 3 Doors Down before but he liked the song a lot. Sitting in a bar, he took the word 'kryptonite' and ran with it, writing a treatment that involved pondering the question 'Where do old superheroes go when they die? The director remembers meeting Mike Teitelbaum, who played the video's main character: an old man who watches clips of himself in his heyday as a superhero on TV, then chases down a pimp harassing a woman in the old man's apartment block.
Karr says that, like everyone in Hollywood, Teitelbaum had multiple strings to his bow. When he wasn't auditioning for acting jobs, he was a medical doctor and a hypnotist who performed under the stage name Dr.
The video was a two-day shoot. Karr remembers the band being devoid of ego and great to work with, if a little stiff to begin with. And that's not always the case when you have egos and stuff involved. Karr knew that for the opening chunk of the video he wanted to use the Rosslyn Lofts, an apartment complex in downtown LA that used to be the Rosslyn Million Dollar Fireproof Hotel.
The bar whose stage the band sings on, and which is frequented by elderly superheroes in lurid and revealing outfits, was the Cowboy Palace Saloon, 30 miles away in the valley. It was next to a strip club, to which Karr ventured with various members of his team as soon as they wrapped. This would have been when it made its way onto Upchurch's radar. Adair joined in His friend Jane, who worked for the studio in which the band had just mixed their second album, Away from the Sun , played them some of his stuff; they loved it and Arnold asked him to audition.
There, Adair had barely played anything when Arnold accepted him into the band and invited him jet skiing. Like Upchurch, Adair wasn't in love with the song. I like the songs that other people don't like as much. This would be challenging for a drummer who wasn't familiar with the genre.
Adair says it was always fun to play because it's full of drum fills and drum rolls. What always annoyed him, however, was that when the chorus started, guitarists Roberts and Henderson would crash in with a different rhythm, not a shuffle. Though he was in the band for less than three years, Adair had the chance to perform in some remarkable environments.
He still has a photo of him and Bush on his studio wall. They're cool. Adair remembers that over the months and years onstage, he would embellish the song to make it fun for himself.
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