Ben Folds - Still Fighting It File
"There’s something so heavy about the line: 'And you'll be tall, and you'll be proud, and I'll be gone.' It turns a mundane lunch at a roast beef stand into a sacred, fleeting moment. It’s a reminder that every 'normal' day we spend with the people we love is actually a countdown. We’re all just fighting the same clock." The Short & Punchy Version
"Ben Folds really looked at his toddler and said, 'Life is going to be hard, you're going to look just like me, and eventually I won't be here to help you—anyway, how’s your roast beef?' Best song ever written about the terrifying reality of time." Ben Folds - Still Fighting It
"We spend our youth trying to be different from our parents, only to wake up one day and see their face in the mirror. 'You’re so much like me, I’m sorry.' It’s one of the most heartbreaking lyrics in music because it acknowledges that our flaws are often the only things we can truly pass down. We’re all just versions of the same struggle, twenty years apart." The "Lunch at Roast Beef" Angle "There’s something so heavy about the line: 'And
"The hardest part of growing up isn't the responsibilities; it’s the slow realization that your parents are just as lost as you are. Ben Folds wrote 'Still Fighting It' as a heads-up to his son: 'Everybody knows it sucks.' It’s an honest, brutal apology for the fact that life is going to be painful, and eventually, we all have to stop being 'the kid' and start being the person who just has to deal with it." The "Mirror" Angle 'You’re so much like me, I’m sorry
"Still Fighting It" is a rare, gut-punch of a song that captures the bittersweet tragedy of time passing. It’s not just a song about a father and son; it’s a song about the realization that the world is going to break your heart, and there’s absolutely nothing your parents can do to stop it. Here are a few "deep" angles or post ideas for it: The "Shattered Innocence" Angle