Song Meaning
These lyrics paint a stark picture of mental struggle, observed by someone who desperately wants to help. The opening lines immediately establish a sense of internal paralysis: "Frozen brain and absent minded." Despite offers of support, the core refrain, "Yeah, it's not alright," cuts through with a raw, undeniable truth.
The central tension here lies in the speaker's earnest attempts to provide solace against the other person's entrenched distress. The speaker offers to be a creative outlet or a source of faith, suggesting, "I'll be the passage you can write in" and "I can be something you believe in." Yet, these offers are met with the persistent, internal battle of "Persuading your brain to dissolve this plight," highlighting the deeply personal and often isolating nature of mental anguish.
The imagery intensifies as the lyrics progress, revealing the speaker's growing helplessness. The powerful line, "The more your nightmares bloom it seems the less I do," vividly captures the terrifying growth of internal suffering and the speaker's diminishing agency. This leads to a poignant, almost magical plea: "How can I turn your days into a conscious dream?" It suggests a yearning for a reality where wishes align with experience, a stark contrast to the current "bumbled muddled crushed defeated" state.
Ultimately, the repeated acknowledgment that "it's not alright" underscores the enduring nature of the struggle. The final lines, "It seems you always pay the price / And it's not alright," deliver a crushing blow, suggesting a cyclical pattern of suffering that feels both unfair and inescapable, leaving the listener with a profound sense of empathy for both the afflicted and the frustrated observer.