Song Meaning
The lyrics paint a picture of someone observing Kaileigh, who seems deeply engrossed in the world of art, believing it's the path to understanding. The narrator notes Kaileigh's process of "build[ing] abstractions" and "mak[ing] stuff up," suggesting a performative aspect to her engagement with art. This initial observation sets a tone of detached curiosity, bordering on skepticism, about Kaileigh's true motivations or depth of understanding.
The core tension arises from the narrator's uncertainty and suspicion. The repeated "I don't know" coupled with "It's tenuous, I know" and "Pretentious, I know" reveals a deep-seated doubt about the authenticity of Kaileigh's artistic pursuits. This doubt escalates into a direct accusation: "She's faking it." The chorus becomes a refrain of this suspicion, questioning the reality behind Kaileigh's actions and persona.
The most striking element is the shift in the second chorus where the narrator admits, "I'm faking too." This confession completely reframes the preceding verses. The narrator isn't just an objective observer; they are complicit in the same act of pretense. The earlier descriptions of Kaileigh "hid[ing] your old taste" and knowing "all the right things" now feel like a projection or a shared insecurity, highlighting a mutual performance rather than a one-sided deception.
This self-implication is what makes the lyrics resonate. The initial judgment of Kaileigh dissolves into a shared vulnerability. The narrator's struggle with authenticity, revealed in the final lines, transforms the song from an accusation into a confession of shared societal pressure to present a curated, perhaps insincere, self. It’s the unexpected turn toward self-awareness that gives the song its punch.