The chorus ends with the question, "You’d come over, right?" This single word encapsulates the song’s central tension—a mixture of doubt, hope, and a plea for mutual reassurance.
At its core, the song is a dialogue between two ex-lovers who have intellectually "figured out" how to live apart but remain emotionally tethered.
The apocalypse serves as a metaphor for the removal of pride and social consequences. It asks if a global ending is necessary to justify a moment of irrational reconnection.
The chorus ends with the question, "You’d come over, right?" This single word encapsulates the song’s central tension—a mixture of doubt, hope, and a plea for mutual reassurance.
At its core, the song is a dialogue between two ex-lovers who have intellectually "figured out" how to live apart but remain emotionally tethered. JP Saxe, Julia Michaels - If The World Was Ending
The apocalypse serves as a metaphor for the removal of pride and social consequences. It asks if a global ending is necessary to justify a moment of irrational reconnection. The chorus ends with the question, "You’d come over, right
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