Song Meaning
These lyrics immediately plunge us into a visceral conflict. "Love on our fingers / And hate on our knuckles" paints a stark, physical picture of intertwined, opposing emotions. The speaker feels trapped, unable to shed these feelings.
That sense of inescapable struggle is amplified by the repeated line, "We just can't get it off." This leads to a resigned, almost defiant gesture: "Throw our hands in the air / And wave them in the air / Like you just don't care." Yet, the preceding verses suggest a deep care, making this outward show of apathy feel like a coping mechanism for an internal battle that simply won't quit.
The imagery intensifies with the unsettling lines, "We got an apple in our forehead / And love's got a gun." The "apple" suggests vulnerability or a target, perhaps even a biblical allusion to temptation or a fall. "Love's got a gun" personifies love not as gentle, but as a dangerous, powerful force, capable of both inflicting pain and demanding surrender.
Crucially, the final stanza shifts the entire emotional landscape. The initial struggle to "get it off" transforms into an insatiable desire: "I just can't get enough / We just can't get enough." Spelling out "L-O-V-E" on their hands, where both love and hate once resided, suggests a powerful, almost obsessive acceptance. It's a compelling twist, turning a desperate struggle into a profound, if complicated, surrender to an overwhelming emotion.