The reason he's not felt this way often before is that after Kim broke his heart, he closed up and didnt let anyone into his personal space and was very cautious with women.
However, he finds himself madly in love with this girl, and he's scared at what might happen if she leaves him:"Promise me if i cave in and break and leave myself open that i wont be making a mistake". He feels very vulnerable while in love because he's had bad experiences with it before.
By the end of the song we find that she has cheated on him, and he is completely crazed and tries to kill her, but then lets her go and shoots himself instead. I absolutely LOVE this song. A love song by eminem is rare and the style is unique to him. You wont find murder in other peoples love songs, or lines like, "I put those hands on your throat, I sit on top of you squeeze 'em till i snap your neck like a popsicle stick".
Eminem is god. This is an anthem to being aeishtt and just letting it rock. What is done in vainTruth is hard to swallow So you pray to God To justify the way you live a lie cursed His name but it broke his heart so he stuck middle finger to world! What this is, forGOD?! This may be my own personal spin on Em's song, but after watching the video I feel I may have actually been close.
After seeing the video, especially, I see it as an internal monologue, or a scenario being played out in his head. Every time he tries to get close to a woman, he has his heart ripped out, so he has possibly subconsciously developed a way to sabotage any feelings before they even begin to occur. The entire song plays in two parts, with two different personalities.
Separate them, and you see the two characters from Em's video. One is the guy who allows himself to fall for a girl, the other is his actual self. In his mind, he's playing out the start of a relationship, and then reminding himself why he shouldn't, which sets up the story told in the rest of the song you'll see at the end , starting with his internal debate in the prechorus, where one part of him wants to find love, but the reality of it is that it's a mistake.
The closing lines show that his want to find love wins out in a battle of reason, so we go to the chorus. The second verse opens with the persona who fell in love in the process of actually falling in love "I'll do whatever it takes The third verse is the ultimate scenario he has built up in his head before ever even meeting the figurative girl. It's easy to think of big stars' records as originating with them—either they're covers, in which case they're borrowed from another artist, or they're new songs, in which case they're the property of their vocalist.
That goes double for hip-hop records, which are supposed to be a pure and basically un-coverable expression of their MCs' personae. The pop world, though, is a much weirder place than that. It's full of songwriters and producers who are constantly struggling to get a leg up, to place the perfect hook with the perfect artist, to make their own names without overshadowing a star.
See, for instance, Eminem 's new video, "Space Bound. The clip features alternate versions of the Detroit MC, one agitated and cynical in the company of his girlfriend played by Grey , the other more pensive and calm. Things begin to take a turn for the worse when the rapper discovers the love of his life is cheating on him. He later attacks her, then turns a gun on himself and commits suicide with a single shot through the head.
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