Song Meaning
These lyrics open with a stark, almost weary admission: "Passa la voglia" – the desire passes. It's a feeling of slow erosion, a quiet surrender to apathy. The narrator grapples with a fading will to engage, even with a significant other, suggesting a relationship sustained by something other than vibrant passion.
This fading desire isn't a simple mood swing; it's deeply tied to a profound fear of solitude. The narrator explicitly states, "Per non restare soli" – "so as not to be alone" – as the driving force behind their actions. It suggests a calculated effort to maintain proximity, even if it means letting certain feelings or memories "pass" rather than confronting them.
Perhaps the most striking imagery arrives with the lines "Dentro la tua pelle / Che mi veste ormai" – "Inside your skin / That now dresses me." This isn't just closeness; it's a visceral, almost suffocating merging of identities. The narrator feels consumed, their own self-hood replaced by the other's desires, finding a strange "forza" (strength) in this absorption, yet it's a strength that comes at a cost.
Ultimately, the lyrics pinpoint the unbearable compromise: the passing "voglia / Di volare un po'" – the desire to fly a little. This loss of personal aspiration, of freedom, is "proprio questo / Che non mi va giù" – precisely what the narrator cannot swallow. It's a quiet, devastating realization that the cost of avoiding loneliness has been the slow death of their own spirit, culminating in the resigned, cyclical echo of "passa la voglia."