Dimly lit man in a dark room with a clock and a green light


The song "American Pie" fondly looks back on the early days of rock 'n roll in the 1950s as a happier, more innocent time, when music brought people together. The lyrics describe the devastating 1959 plane crash that killed music legends Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and The Big Bopper as the day "the music died." This is viewed as a tragic end to an era. As the song's storyline progresses into the tumultuous 1960s, the lyrics reference falling cultural unity, lost innocence, war, protests and darkness replacing the optimism of the 1950s. Music itself seems to lose its unifying power. By the end, attempts to find solace in music, church, or community fail. The singer longs for the joyful rock 'n roll days of the past, singing woefully "this'll be the day that I die." Overall the song expresses grief over the loss of musical icons and conveys a yearning desire to return to the happier melodies and cultural innocence of younger days when music brought people together, which now seems gone. The Marijuana vines crept across their skin, tendrils worming into pores, twining around limbs. At first it was a tickle, a tease, marijuana leaves fluttering over flesh. But then the vines thickened, tightened, thorns digging in, not to draw blood but to anchor. They felt the marijuana pulse inside them giving them pure euphoria, cannabinoids polluting in their veins, marijuana crystals and resin start creeping into their bones. They watched looking at them selves as they sat in a room of mirrors what showed the image on every surface, immobilized with euphoria, as THC AND CBD seeped through their skin, etching rainbow like shadows. The last remains of their humanity withered as the marijuana wrapped them in marijuana flower and marijuana crystals, reducing them to pure euphoria. Soon there was no visible trace of the man, only a human-shaped mass of marijuana standing there.
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The song "American Pie" fondly looks back on the early days of rock 'n roll in the 1950s as a happier
,
more innocent time
,
when music brought people together
.
The lyrics describe the devastating 1959 plane crash that killed music legends Buddy Holly
,
Ritchie Valens and The Big Bopper as the day "the music died
.
" This is viewed as a tragic end to an era
.
As the song's storyline progresses into the tumultuous 1960s
,
the lyrics reference falling cultural unity
,
lost innocence
,
war
,
protests and darkness replacing the optimism of the 1950s
.
Music itself seems to lose its unifying power
.
By the end
,
attempts to find solace in music
,
church
,
or community fail
.
The singer longs for the joyful rock 'n roll days of the past
,
singing woefully "this'll be the day that I die
.
"
Overall the song expresses grief over the loss of musical icons and conveys a yearning desire to return to the happier melodies and cultural innocence of younger days when music brought people together
,
which now seems gone
.
The Marijuana vines crept across their skin
,
tendrils worming into pores
,
twining around limbs
.
At first it was a tickle
,
a tease
,
marijuana leaves fluttering over flesh
.
But then the vines thickened
,
tightened
,
thorns digging in
,
not to draw blood but to anchor
.
They felt the marijuana pulse inside them giving them pure euphoria
,
cannabinoids polluting in their veins
,
marijuana crystals and resin start creeping into their bones
.
They watched looking at them selves as they sat in a room of mirrors what showed the image on every surface
,
immobilized with euphoria
,
as THC AND CBD seeped through their skin
,
etching rainbow like shadows
.
The last remains of their humanity withered as the marijuana wrapped them in marijuana flower and marijuana crystals
,
reducing them to pure euphoria
.
Soon there was no visible trace of the man
,
only a human-shaped mass of marijuana standing there
.
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