Song Meaning
The lyrics immediately plunge into a raw, direct declaration of mutual obsession: "Hey let's not pretend that We're not on each other minds." The speaker identifies a specific person as their "Red Slurpee," a vivid, consumable metaphor for an intense, perhaps fleeting, attachment. This fixation unfolds within the strange, everyday landscape of the "7-11 of my soul."
This internal 7-11 appears to be a place of emotional imprisonment, where the speaker is "doing time" for this connection. There's a defiant, almost rebellious undertone, as the speaker repeatedly asserts, "It's got everything to do with rock n roll." This suggests an unapologetic embrace of their consuming feelings, framing their emotional state as a core part of their identity.
The "Red Slurpee" metaphor deepens in the second verse, where the speaker rejects alternatives with a stark "I don't like blue." This highlights a singular, almost stubborn devotion, implying a deliberate choice to focus solely on this specific person. The shift in responsibility, from "my problems" to "your cues," suggests the speaker's emotional state is entirely dictated by the other person, underscoring a profound lack of internal agency.
The final verse brings a visceral, almost destructive intimacy with the line "I suck you dry." Yet, amidst this consuming act, there's a moment of poignant self-awareness: "I wonder who I'm crying for." The lyrics conclude with a darkly humorous, slightly tragic image, clinging to a remnant of the consumed relationship: "at least I've got the straw." This captures the lingering attachment, even after the object of affection is gone, making the intense fixation feel both deeply personal and universally resonant.