Song Meaning
On a familiar walk home, the narrator encounters an unfamiliar flower. Despite its appearance not matching their preferences, they find themselves inexplicably drawn to it. This initial encounter sets up a central tension: the conflict between preconceived notions of liking and disliking, and the unexpected pull of attraction.
The core of the lyrics revolves around a ritualistic act of "plucking petals" to determine "like or dislike." This repeated phrase, "好き嫌い 好き嫌い" (like, dislike, like, dislike), underscores the narrator's internal struggle to categorize and rationalize their feelings. The hope is that the final remaining petal will confirm a preference, but there's an underlying anxiety that it might not.
The most striking craft element is the personification of the flower and the narrator's projection onto it. The flower "bloomed without a shred of fear," a quality the narrator identifies as the reason for their attraction. This suggests the narrator finds solace or admiration in the flower's uninhibited existence, a stark contrast to their own internal deliberation. The repeated petal-plucking ritual, particularly the lines "Will it be okay to entrust my fate to the last petal?" and the melancholic "If the last petal is the one I dislike...", reveal a deep-seated vulnerability and a desire for external validation, even from a flower.
These lyrics resonate because they capture the quiet, often irrational way attraction can bloom. The simple act of encountering a flower becomes a metaphor for confronting unexpected feelings and the fear of what those feelings might reveal about oneself. The gentle, almost hesitant tone, coupled with the recurring motif of the petal-plucking, creates a poignant exploration of desire, self-doubt, and the hope for a favorable outcome in matters of the heart.