Sunday, October 27, 2013

Monday Muses Blog


Grace Bugler 809
Monday Muses Blog
Writing off of a song: They Do They Don’t, by Jack Johnson

The song “They Do They Don’t” inspires me to appreciate what I have and learn to never give up. It speaks to me because it’s different then most songs. It’s not a love song or a break-up song; it’s a song about the way Jack Johnson feels. He sings about the way he sees life.
The song starts off with a really dark tone. The first line, “Tied down against the tracks/ Screaming in silent black and white” has a lot of different meanings in it. I usually think of it as like a classic black and white movie scene. I picture a screaming girl tied against railroad tracks, but nobody can hear her. In the song, I think the greater meaning is that he feels trapped, and he’s screaming for help, but nobody hears him. I have felt this way before, so I know how it feels. For example, there has been a lot of pressure about picking a high school lately and sometimes I feel my parents don’t actually hear the things I say about a school that I like. It makes me feel like I am screaming at air. The first line always makes me feel listened to and I calm down when I hear the rhythm of the song. The hook speaks to me and I always find myself singing it out loud.
Another line that relates to me is “we were used/ Used to thinking we got nothing to lose/ we're losing everything but the truth”. I think Jack Johnson means that he once thought he didn’t have anything to lose, but now everything he has is gone and all he has left is the truth. I think the truth might be something he has been avoiding telling. He may have lost everything lying to people and now he must tell what he has been hiding. I can relate to this because I have been in a situation where I lied to avoid telling the truth. In the end I had run out of lies and I eventually had to come clean, but sometimes it doesn’t work that way, and if you wait too long to tell the truth you may be too late.
This song makes me feel heard. It’s always nice to know that you’re not the only one dealing with certain problems. Whenever I listen to this song I remember how good the world can be if you look at life with a positive perspective. Whenever I’m feeling down I just listen to this song and I feel so much better.

"They Do They Don't"

Tied down against the tracks
Screaming in silent black and white
Why'd you trust us we are such villains
We would tell ourselves anything
we want to hear if we are willing
To listen is to learn
Then too much is what we deserve

And how come when we say that we do
We don't
Pray to anybody you want
We won't

But if we're the ones to blame then the fruit
Shouldn't taste so good we were used
Used to thinking we got nothing to lose
We're losing everything but the truth
Is walking straight into a roadblock ending left here bending
Your point of view was chosen by the serpent's ruse

With all its do's and don'ts
The future is an empty promise
Unconcerned and so tired of waiting
We could sell it wooden horses
full of nightmares and when they open
This all might recompose
There's no going back to the good old days
it's just a phase bring in some new life
Archaism is a dusty road leading us back to nowhere

But if we're the ones to blame then the fruit
Shouldn't taste so good we were used
Used to thinking we got nothing to lose
We're losing everything but the truth
Is walking straight into a roadblock ending left here bending
Your point of view was chosen by the serpent's ruse

How come when we say we do
We don't
How come when we say we will
We won't

1 comment:

  1. I really liked how you express what the song meant to you and what the song was about. I really liked how you went deeper in your explaining. You didn't just state the obvious.

    ReplyDelete

Finished Book List

  • Looking For Alaska by John Green, November
  • Forever by Maggie Stiefvater, November 14
  • Linger by Maggie Stiefvater, Sptember 24
  • Shiver by Maggie Stiefvater, September
  • The Future of Us by Jay Asher and Carolyn Mackler, August
  • Before I Fall by Lauren Oliver, August
  • The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, July
  • Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins, July
  • Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins, July