Reconstructive Demonstrations

Unveiling the Desperate Symphony: Walls Retire, Dreams Speak, and Disease Descends
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Lyrics

They say women cry when walls retire

Expressing a belief that women cry when societal barriers or restrictions are removed.

They say dead men die when walls retire

Conveying the idea that dead men experience a form of death when societal walls or boundaries cease to exist.

When walls retire

Reiterating the theme of walls retiring and the impact it has on individuals.


Unconventional deconstructive conversations

Referring to unconventional and deconstructive discussions that involve learning how to eat metaphorically.

(Teach us how to eat)

The parenthetical phrase emphasizes the metaphorical nature of learning how to eat in the context of conversations.

I will never let you go

Expressing a commitment to holding onto something or someone.

Conversational reconstructive demonstrations

Describing conversations that aim to reconstruct and teach the art of speaking.

(Teach us how to speak)

Similar to line 6, emphasizing the metaphorical aspect of learning how to speak.

Why confess the final blow

Raising a question about confessing a final, decisive action.


Teach us how to eat from your broken hands

Asking for guidance on sustaining oneself, using the metaphor of eating from broken hands.

'Cause nothing seems to grow

Expressing a sense of stagnation or lack of progress in life.

Teach us how to speak

Reiterating the need to learn how to speak, this time focusing on the language of dreams.

The language of your only dreams

Emphasizing the exclusive nature of the language being referred to in the context of dreams.


No one seems to understand that

Highlighting a general lack of understanding among people about a specific situation.

We are falling to our knees

Describing a collective descent or decline, possibly indicating a loss of hope or surrender.


I forgot to pray, you forgot to say please (kill me)

Acknowledging neglect or omission, with a plea for mercy or release.

I will never let you go

Reiterating a commitment to holding onto someone or something.

I forgot to go, you forgot to know me (Teach us how to speak)

Expressing a mutual forgetfulness, possibly indicating a breakdown in communication.

Why confess the final blow

Questioning the need to confess or admit to a final, decisive action.


Teach us how to eat from your broken hands

Repeating the metaphor of learning how to eat from broken hands, emphasizing a sense of desperation or need.

'Cause nothing seems to grow

Expressing a sense of stagnation or lack of growth, echoing line 13.

Teach us how to speak

Reiterating the need to learn how to speak, focusing on the language of dreams.

The language of your only dreams

Re-emphasizing the exclusive nature of the language being referred to in the context of dreams.


No one seems to understand that

Restating the theme of a general lack of understanding among people about a specific situation.

We are falling to our knees

Describing a collective descent or decline, mirroring line 18.

Blindness serves not God nor men

Stating that blindness is not beneficial to either God or humanity.

So we are falling into disease

Highlighting a descent into disease, possibly symbolizing moral or societal decay.


I'm falling into disease

Repeating the theme of descending into disease.


I'm falling, I'm falling, I'm falling, I'm falling

Repeatedly emphasizing the act of falling into disease, possibly to underscore the gravity of the situation.

I'm falling, I'm falling, I'm falling, I'm falling

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We're falling, we're falling, we're falling, we're falling

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Into, into disease, disease, disease, disease

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Disease, disease, disease, disease, disease

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Disease, disease, disease (We're falling, we're falling, we're falling, we're falling)

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We've fallen, we've fallen, we've fallen

Confirming the occurrence of a fall into a negative state or condition.


No one seems to understand that

Reiterating the theme of a general lack of understanding among people about a specific situation.

We are falling to our knees

Describing a collective descent or decline, echoing lines 18 and 31.

Blindness serves not god nor men

Restating that blindness is not beneficial to either God or humanity, echoing line 32.

So we are falling into disease

Reiterating the descent into disease, mirroring lines 33 and 35.

Disease

Finalizing the acknowledgment of falling into disease, serving as a conclusion to the narrative.

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