Just The Crazy Me!!
  • History

    What the use of learning history? I just can’t see the point beside its torturing and killing me. The teacher is boring and the subject too. Boring teacher+ boring subject = ONE MAJOR HEADACHE. I mean can anyone at least give me the slightest idea why?

    Gosh………

    It was beyond headache. All we do is some lame yes i would like to emphasis on the word lame presentation. And the long talk was killing me. And don’t anyone realise that the fan wasn’t functioning properly? Back to History. Can they just drop it or something. It only make my report card ugly. And yes would someone tell me who the hell suggest to learn history?

    What we learn in History? British conquer this and that and whatever. And why we have to remember who and when the thing happen. That guy was dead! I repeat he is DEAD. And he was not a good man or did contribute anything.

    Tell me just anything reasonable. History is another crapping syllabus they had in school. What la Malaysia???????

    UGLY MALAYSIAN

    I just think that living in Malaysia is beyond stink. In other better word it sucks. Why do we teenagers generally have to do so many damn homeworks? Gosh its killing me. And talk about the good Malaysian we always brag about. Yeah, is really that Malaysian is good. Throwing rubbish here and there. That is good? I call it weird Malaysian. And it began to sucks when just because one stupid teen didn’t respect an old lady or the so called citizen they go on posting articles on the newspaper. Gosh… Does it really necessary? I mean not all teenager is like that. To make things worst the media began to make it the hold damn issues and big huha on it. WTF was that? Excuse me for my language.

    The reason that i was so angry is that i met an old lady and she was nagging to her so i don’t know who and i don’t care either about how teen nowadays. And she just see all the negative side. Just because her grandson was a major asshole that doesn’t mean that she can condemn what teen are like nowadays. Just to be polite i end up helping her to carried her things and all i get is a pretty nice sarcasm. I was not thinking that she would say thanks but that was beyond…HUH?Gosh…Adults as role model? It sounds pretty scary. Hey, i was trying to show her what a good teen i am and sincerely. Guess she need glasses to see what am i trying to do for her.

    Whatever i just not going to bought the words when someone said about our so called Malaysian. And yeah….. Government please take note that we don’t need so much homeworks to be smart. Learn something on Finnish studying style. They were top on the list and it was far better relaxing….

    DEADLY GAMES

    I came across bizarre law regarding way to curb online game addiction. Here is what I really think when the first thing I read about it. A provoking question indeed that rushed into my brains.

    “Are kids so hooked on video violence that it becomes their reality?”

    Huh? I mean that couldn’t be possible right? So just to satisfy my curiosity I checked on some police case scenario that happen involving teenagers based on what they described under the influence of online games. And yes indeed I found some interesting case.

    On June 7, 2003 when the deputy awoke 18 year old Devin Moore from the car, cuffed him and drove him to the police station nearby. He was found in a hot car so he was charged with receiving stolen property and warned him that he might end up in the prison. That got the young man thinking and planning. He snatched Strickland’s 40- caliber Glock, intending to handcuff the patrolman to crump and then escape. “But after I got his pistol he started screaming and I freaked out,” Moore said later. “I don’t know how many times I shot him but I shot him until he fell to the floor.”

    In the months before the shootings, Moore had sat for hours in front of a video monitor stealing cars, moving down pedestrian, pummeling prostitutes until pools of blood gathered near them and finally slaughtering police officers. The game is Grand Theft Auto.

    “Morality, what is it? Who needs it?” – Grand theft Auto Vice City

    Due to this scenario the china government which has an estimated 25 million online gamers, is so concerned that in August it introduces a system intended to curb online game addiction. Gamers who spend more than three hours online will have game points cut as a disincentive to continued play. After five hours, players will be subjected every 15 minutes to messages calling for them to offline immediately. Later at the police station he said “Life is like a video game. You have to die sometime.”

                Well I can’t blame the government in taking that drastic action. But doesn’t it look like the government is just panicking. Whatever as long as Malaysia isn’t going to suggest some stupid laws like that regarding on how many hours we should spent in front of the pc. Anyway who’s paying the bill not them right? Anyway I do think that Moore been taking it easy and I like what he said-“Life is like a video game. You have to die sometime.” LOL………

    Happy Birthday To Me( Sweet sixteen)

    Chocolate cake

    Ice cream

    Finally I turned sweet sixteen. Happy birthday to me.

    SLAYING THE BOGEYMAN

    Slaying the bogeyman

    Monster under the bed

    A thunderstorm

    The dark

    All young children including me worry about things, real or imagined. And as we grow, so do the anxieties. Will my friends like me? Will I do greatly on my test? Most parents like mine manage to console their kids and lessen their fears. But for some of them, anxiety crosses the line from normal to unhealthy.

    Long time ago, anxiety crosses my line too. I worried all the time. I always think that I am not perfect so I tend to rebel and keep quite. I am not the person like you see me in the past. In the past Adyla was a quite girl who doesn’t mix with other kids. That was when I was 5 years old. But now I am the funny, talkative and outgoing person. Much more different from the person I used to be.

    I wonder whether worrying is normal at all. So I ask my mom and being a teacher she got a best friend of her who is a counselor. And according to her worries are a part of growing up- and being grown up. It’s definitely normal and even healthy for children as well as teenagers to worry a little. It gives us the tools to withstand life’s bumps and spills.

    Detection however is vital. Continued anxiety in childhood can place a child at risk for low self-esteem, lack of confidence, unhealthy relationships, depressions and even suicide. Abnormal childhood anxiety increases the like hood of mood disorders and substance abuse later in life.

    Here the way to kill the bogeyman

    1. face your fears

    2. talk openly about your unique feelings and fears and nip anxiety in the bud whenever possible

    3. don’t feel overwhelmed by too many activities

    4. enforce proper sleep and dietary

    5. And lastly encourage yourself to take risk and face increasingly complex challenges so that the comfort zones and feel good of yourself.

    FREEDOM

     

    What do you as Humans, believe is Freedom? Odds are you would be partially wrong and partially correct. You will notice I did not say “right,” but correct. Many use the wrong words to convey their meanings; are then befuddled by the reaction, when they were the cause of their own misunderstanding. I will avoid this dilemma, through the use of correct verbiage and text.

    What is Freedom; TRUE FREEDOM?

    Each and every one believes, they are free; but are they really? No. Freedom; true freedom comes when one is aware of another’s rights and abilities to do as they wish, within a specific moral spectrum. In essence; one can do anything one wants, as long as that action or lack of action does not impede, oppress or hinder any other person from exercising their freedom. If one wants to act or do nothing; one is free to do so as long as that deed cause no affect or effect to another. In everyone’s mind, they are all correct in their thoughts, their manner of conduct and in some cases, their actions; but to impede, oppress, hinder or deter another from acting or not acting on their wishes is the impedance of Freedom.

    Is there any member of the Humanity willing to stand up and state beyond a shadow of a doubt they are absolutely correct in everything they do, or plan to do? No. Is there any government, country, ethnic group, race, religious sect or denomination prepared to make a similar claim, to perfection? Freedom is the ability to make such a claim; while allowing others to make their claims in understanding that all claims are correct and at the same time incorrect. Freedom is the absolute ability to allow others to be FREE. If one follows or leads; one is not free. If one stops another from doing what they wish to do; one is not free. If one harms or causes harm to another one is not free. If one is harmed or is afraid of being harmed; one is not free.

    Freedom is a tight-rope one must walk from the day of one’s birth to the day of one’s death. None have truly walked it in true freedom; fore there are so many things that deter, infringe and impede such true freedom.

    In a world where FREEDOM is key; no one is truly free to be FREE.

    Mankind was given FREEWILL; it is incumbent on Mankind, then to express their freedom, by giving freedom to all others; regardless of race, creed, ethnic group, religious sect or denomination or country of origin. As “One” species we should be free; as “One” species. There is only ONE race of People; the HUMAN RACE; are you not a free member?

    What is ” L O V E ” ?

    Love
    My view on LOVE.

     

    A) Something extremely rare, precious, and infinitely mysterious, which nearly every individual (and every self-help author) claims to be an expert on.

    B) Something that we can never define with words, yet are completely obsessed with.

    C) What we all we all search for continually . . . and experience, rarely.

    D) It’s where you are “IT” to somebody else, and somebody else is “IT” to you.

    E) A need, desire, sensation, craving, emotion, or appetite (such as security, loneliness, possessiveness, dependency, horniness, etc) dressed in a warm, heavy coat of wishful thinking and pretense.

    F) Something we all talk about, think about, hear songs about, dream about, watch movies about, read about, sing about - about which we really know almost nothing.

    G) Something we all taste in rare, brief moments of intimacy - which some say is a brief glimpse of actual spiritual enlightenment . . . but normally takes place in between long periods of pain, boredom, and loneliness..

    H) Something we base our lives around, but that most of us don’t really want to waste any time actually thinking about. (see also: “Something way too important to talk about.”)

    I) Something that is so important that it needs not only to be talked about, but studied, researched, understood, practiced, and lived.

    J) Something you promise to remain in, for better or worse, in sickness and health, for richer or poorer, etc, etc . . . or until you abandon it when things get boring or become inconvenient.

    K) Chivalric: A perpetually unfulfilled longing for the idealized other from afar that is never consummated.

    L) Non-Chivalric: sexual attraction, normally covered with a thick layer of pretense (see also: something men claim to feel towards someone they want to have sex with).

    M) Corinthians: “Love is patient and kind; love is not jealous, or conceited, or proud; love is not ill-mannered, or selfish, or irritable; love does not keep a record of wrongs: love is not happy with evil, but is happy with the truth. Love never gives up: its faith, hope and patience never fail. Love is eternal.”

    N) Plato’s Aristophanes: Humans were originally whole and complete, both male and female, until they were divided into separate types, males and females, and were condemned to wander the world in search of their other half. Love is that force that is motivating them to search for that other half.

    O) Childhood unconscious theory: it is the unconscious compulsion to resolve unfulfilled childhood needs.

    P) Louis MacNeice: “Time was away and somewhere else, There were two glasses and two chairs . . . And two people with one pulse.”

    Q) Martin Buber: “I-Thou,” where each partner fully experiences the other as merging of consciousness, where absolutely nothing is held back.

    R) Addiction Theory: It is something one is addicted to, in the same way one gets addicted to alcohol, drugs, food, bad television, and other things, where one person uses the other person to escape from certain feelings, or really, themselves.

    S) A coping mechanism to counter The Problem of Life, or the pain of one’s existential isolation and separateness.

    T) Something you “fall into” . . . often shortly before trying desperately to climb out of.

    U) Andreas Cappellanus: “. . . a certain inborn suffering derived from the sight of and excessive meditation upon the beauty of the opposite sex, which causes each one to wish above all things the embraces of the other and by common desire to carry out all of love’s precepts in the other’s embrace.”

    V) Something that is “unconditional.”

    W) Something that is very conditional - for example, on a person’s age, height, social status, physical attractiveness, perceived financial status, perceived power, sexual skills, income potential, sense of humor, pheromones, taste in clothes, conversational abilities, cologne, cleanliness of underwear, etc.

    X) Economic: a give-and-take, where something (affection, caresses, sex, compliments, money) is given in return for something else.

    Y) Chemical: a certain temporary biochemical combination of pheromones and hormones.

    Z) Projection theory: it is the unconscious activity of taking one’s innermost highest qualities and ideals and superimposing them, or projecting them, upon another person, and then “falling” in “love” with that projection.

    AA) D.H. Lawrence: “Love means the pre-cognitive flow . . . it is the honest state before the apple.”

    BB) Evolutionary Psychology and Somerset Maugham: Love is Nature’s way of fooling us into having children.

    CC) Feminism: a cultural invention created by men for the subjugation of women, or a misleading substitute for status, wealth, education, or power that women have been deceived into accepting.

    DD) Leo Buscaglia: A learned, emotional reaction or phenomenon; A need; A duty; something you live or grow in; the self; something that is spontaneous; something that cannot be defined by a word; life’s greatest challenge; a goal devoutly to be strived for.

    EE) Something we feel unconditionally, as long as we’ve had our coffee in the morning, towards those individuals we had previously selected to be our favorites.

    FF) Something a guy tells a girl he feels in order to get her to have sex with him.

    GG) Something you are born knowing “how” to do, but soon forget.

    HH) Ambrose Bierce: “A temporary insanity curable by marriage or by removal of the patient from the influences under which he incurred the disorder.”

    II) Victor Hugo: “. . . the boundless release of infinite meditation.”

    JJ) A state of allowing people and things to be exactly as they are.

    KK) Something that, sooner or later, becomes jealousy, indifference, hate, or boredom.

    LL) C.S. Lewis: what is behind affection, friendship, erotic love, and the love of God.

    MM) Something you get from another person.

    NN) Something you give to another person.

    OO) Something that is neither given nor possessed.

    PP) The closest thing most of us mortals normally feel to being complete.

    QQ) Rilke: “I hold this to be the highest task of a bond between two people: that each should stand guard over the solitude of the other.”

    RR) It’s “God”; or something “God” “feels” towards us, and we feel towards Him (as long as He does what we want Him to).

    SS) Thornton Wilder: “…and we ourselves shall be loved for a while and forgotten. But the love will have been enough; all those impulses of love return to the love that made them. Even memory is not necessary for love. There is a land of the living and a land of the dead, and the bridge is love, the only survival, the only meaning.”.

    TT) Germaine Greer: “Love, love, love - all the wretched cant of it, masking egotism, lust, masochism, fantasy under a mythology of sentimental postures, a welter of self-induced miseries and joys, blinding and masking the essential personalities in the frozen gestures of courtship, in the kissing and the dating and the desire, the compliments and the quarrels which vivify its barrenness.”

    UU) Pat Benatar: “Love is a battlefield.”

    VV) Max Headroom: “The walks over soft grass . .. . the smiles over candlelight, the arguments over just about everything else.”

    WW) A spiritual condition, which we generally become intensely fascinated with right around the age when puberty hits.

    XX) A noble-sounding word we use both to describe a process of mutual flattery and ego-boosting (”You are the greatest man in the history of the universe!” “You are the most beautiful women in the history of the universe!”) and to rationalize weakness, laziness, manipulation, irresponsibility, stupidity, self-indulgence, or cruelty.

    YY) The opposite of “hate.”

    ZZ) The same thing as “hate,” only experienced from the opposite perspective.

    AAA) Something that is completely beyond ordinary “hate” and “love”.

    BBB) The opposite of “indifference.”

    CCC) Philip Larkin: “What will survive of us is love.”

    DDD) John Ciardi: “Love is the word used to label the sexual excitement of the young, the habituation of the middle-aged, and the mutual dependence of the old.”

    EEE) It’s who we really are; or in another way, it’s the natural state of the human heart when it is free from the grip of fear, anger, anxiety, guilt, shame, and selfishness . . . or ego.

    FFF) Peter Ustinov: “Love is an act of endless forgiveness.”

    GGG) A type of currency, like money, except in a more subtle form - of feeling, energy, emotion, or sensation.

    HHH) Francois, duc de La Rochefoucauld: “Women often think they are in love when they are not: the business of an intrigue, the emotional flutter of gallantry, natural delight in being loved, and the difficulty of saying no, all these conspire to persuade them that they are being passionate when they are merely being flirtatious.”

    III) David Deida: “Love is what light feels like.”

    JJJ) Meet Joe Black: “Trust, responsibility, taking the weight for your choices and feelings and spending the rest of your life living up to them; and above all, not hurting the object of your love . . . multiplied by infinity and taken to the depth of forever and you will still have barely a glimpse of what I am talking about.”

    KKK) The complete absence of the feeling-sense of separation and distinction.

    LLL) It is just “IT.”

    MMM) It is definitely not “IT”. (Or at least, it’s not what we ordinarily think of it as being.)

    NNN) Something we are born knowing about, but forget.

    OOO) Something we are born knowing nothing about, but can learn.

    PPP) Two separate things merging into one.

    QQQ) Bhagavan Das: “Love, the desire to unite with something else, implies the consciousness of the possibility of such union, and that its full significance is this: an instinctive, ingrained, inherent perception by each individual self . . . of its essential underlying unity, oneness . . . with all other selves; unity in the being of the All-Self, the Universal, Abstract, Inner Self . . . and the consequently inevitable endeavour of these individual selves, these fragments of the one Self, to break through the walls separating each from each - the walls that have disrupted the original ‘One Self’ into the ‘many selves’ - and thus merge into each other and re-form the single whole.”

    RRR) Osho: “What is love anyway? Generally, what is know as love is really attachment. It is a way to forget oneself. It is a means of escaping oneself through someone else. This kind of love acts as an intoxicant. It does not free someone from misery, it merely stupefies him, makes it bearable. This kind of love I call the relationship form It is not really love at all. It is an illusion of love that grown out of one’s own wretchedness.”

    SSS) Woody Allen: “Love creates tension; sex relieves it.”

    TTT) Something really important, yet rare, that we get only a glimpse of during moments of intense intimacy.

    UUU) It’s not a big enough word to describe how we feel.

    VVV) “. . . it always drives me nuts when I hear a guy going on about something a girl does that’s supposed to be so sexy . . . like how she flips her hair, how she stands with one foot to the side, it could be anything. Because that’s nothing! That’s nothing! That’s just like, something she does, and she probably only does it because she saw it in a movie or something! It’s not real, it’s not their real stuff . . . it’s all the outside stuff, and that’s fine in the beginning - I mean, you need the outside stuff, like the reasons to be in love . . . but I think you can get past that, and where all the little tricks don’t mean anything . . . It takes years and years together. I can’t describe it exactly, but it’s like there’s nothing she can do, all her usual ways of hooking you in have no effect . . . and yet you’re still in love. It’s like “the act” is over, and you get to the part that she’s been hiding, and it’s like she’s been hiding it because she thinks that that’s the part that’s going to blow it, or make you leave, or get bored or whatever . . . but you get to that part, and you’re still there. And you’re even more in love.” - Dylan Kidd, from the film Roger Dodger

    WWW) The key ingredient to happiness in this life.

    XXX) Iris Murdoch: “Love is the extremely difficult realization that someone other than oneself is real.”

    YYY) Omraam Mikhaël Aïvanhov: “On the basis of protecting their independence, many people refuse to participate in the collective life. Well, these people do not realize to what extent they are actually limiting themselves. They move within the small circle of their feelings, their desires, and their lusts. What poverty, what misery! This is not freedom. This limited state is normal for a child, but not for an adult. Adults must show that they are able to think of others: their family first, of course, but also their neighbors, friends, colleagues, and fellow citizens . . . And even then, this is limited. The circle must become wider and wider, to include the country, the race, the whole of humanity . . . and still further, to encompass immensity, infinity, the universe . . . Rare are those who have reached beyond these limitations, whose desires, thoughts, and interests converge on the collective, universal aspect of life. It is in this direction that we must strive.”

    ZZZ) Simone Weil: “It is not for man to seek, or even to believe in, God. He only has to refuse his ultimate love to everything that is not God. This refusal does not presuppose any belief. It is enough to recognize what is obvious to any mind: that all the goods of this world, past, present, and future, real or imaginary, are finite and limited and radically incapable of satisfying the desire that perpetually burns within us for an infinite and perfect good.”

    A4) Haridas Chaudhuri: “All particular objects of love much be understood, in ultimate analysis, as various modes of manifestation of the absolute, which is the pole-star of all emotional yearning. In the final analysis, it is the absolute which is loved in all finite things.”

    B4) It’s something like “seeing.” A single eye alone can perceive two directions of length, or vertically, and width, or horizontally. But when there are two eyes, and they work together to focus on a single object - an entirely new dimension - depth - opens up. So maybe, this is one way that two separate little pieces of the universe can get a glimpse of a whole other dimension…

    C4) Sister Consolata: “Forget everything, love Me continually, even if thy heart is as cold as stone. Everything depends on the incessant act of love.”

    D4) Samael Aun Weor: “Love is felt in the depth of the heart; it is a delectable experience; it is a consuming fire; it is divine wine, a delight to those who drink it. A simple perfumed handkerchief, a letter, a flower give rise in the depth of the soul to a great inner uneasiness, exotic ecstasy and ineffable voluptuousness. No one has been able to define love; it has to be lived; it has to be felt. Only great lovers really know what is that which is called love.”

    E4) Mark Matousek: “Think about love,” he said. “We use that word to mean everything it isn’t, but what is love truly? It is action in alignment with nature, nature attuned to the force pulsing through your veins and the veins of the planet. People who are in that dimension of love are in God. They are illumined. Think of it as a form of genius. Everyone has a touch of it, but some have concentrated and harnessed it to the point where it bears fruit and spreads something wonderful in the world.”

    F4) e. e. cummings: “somewhere i have never travelled, gladly beyond any experience, your eyes have their silence: in your most frail gesture are things which enclose me, or which i cannot touch because they are too near . . . ”

    G4) Frithjof Schuon: “Love is in the depths of man as water is in the depths of the earth, and man suffers from not being able to enjoy this infinity that he carries within himself and for which he is made . . . One must dig the soil of the soul, through layers of aridity and bitterness, to find love and to live in it . . . The profundity of love is inaccessible to man in his state of hardness, but it reveals itself outwardly in the language of art and also that of nature. In sacred art and virgin nature, the soul can taste by analogical anticipation something of the love which sleeps within it and of which it has only the nostalgia and not the experience . . .”

    AFRICA THE ART OF THE CONTINENT:WESTERN AFRICA

    Funerary Head, Akan, Ghana, Terracotta,

    My new online friend is from western Africa. And they had somehow I called the arts of the continent. And gosh he was way too enthusiast telling me that so just to tell you I do found that country unique. Seriously. Thought of going to that country but since i am sustain to sunlight so not now but maybe someday. And yes, this is what he tell me about the art of the continent. Nice right? I call it learning.

    The peoples of the Atlantic coast of western Africa, from Cameroon to Senegal and as far inland as the Savanna, have developed sophisticated art traditions.

    Many languages are spoken in western Africa. The Bantu language probably spread from the Nigeria-Cameroon border over much of Africa south of the Sahara. Ironworking technology probably dispersed from the same area, although its origin may have been farther north or east.

    Western Africa is rich in archaeological finds. Metalworking and ceramics appeared in this area about two thousand years ago. Iron tools allowed for efficient clearing of the forest, tilling of the soil, and harvesting of crops, leading to the establishme nt of settled agricultural communities, a prerequisite for major art production.

    ron also facilitated the carving of sculpture in wood. Clayworking led to efficient storage and cooking vessels and allowed for the development of ceramic statuary.

    The ceramic sculptures of the Nok culture of northern Nigeria, dating from about 500 b.c. to a.d. 200, are the earliest known examples of figurative sculpture south of the Sahara. It has been suggested that they were made by women, an idea in part based o n later evidence from Ghana that female Akan potters made that society’s heads and figures portraying the royal dead

    The practice of casting metal sculpture, in copper alloys of varying composition, appeared at Igbo-Ukwu in eastern Nigeria in the tenth century, in Ife (along with clay sculpture) about two centuries later, and at Benin still later.

    The casting of copper alloys continued to flourish at Benin as late as the end of the nineteenth century, ending as a royally sponsored art only with the British Punitive Expedition of 1897, which removed thousands of works that had decorated the king’s p alace and the royal ancestral altars.

    Many sculptural traditions in wood (a medium that does not survive archaeologically) developed in western Africa. Some were associated with leadership: the royal arts of the Akan of Ghana, the kingdoms and chieftaincies of the grasslands in Cameroon, and the richly diverse artistic traditions of the Yoruba of Nigeria.

    Works of art were produced to celebrate chiefly prestige, to decorate shrines, for divination, and to control supernatural forces.

    Farther west in this area are found a variety of masks associated with coming-of-age ceremonies and voluntary associations. Most of these are used by men’s groups, with the unique exception of the masks and figures produced for women’s societies in Sierra Leone and Liberia.

    So, what do you think? I love it. I call it fascinating.

    Hello world!

    Everyday is getting worse
    Do the same things and it hurts
    I don’t know if I should cry
    All I know is that I’m tryin’
    I wanna believe in you
    I wanna believe in you
    But you make it so hard to do

    What’s the point of makin’ plans
    You break all the ones we had
    I don’t know where we went wrong
    Cuz we used to be so strong
    I wanna believe in you
    I wanna believe in you

    So why can’t you be
    Be good to me

    I don’t ask for much
    All I want is love
    Someone to see
    That’s all I need
    Somebody to be
    Somebody to be
    Somebody to be
    Good to me
    Good to me
    Can you be good to me
    Good to me
    Please

    I used to think I had it all
    Then one day we hit a wall
    I had hoped you were the one
    Where’s my dream, where has it gone
    I wanted to be with you
    Forever just me and you

    So why can’t you be
    Be good to me

    I don’t ask for much

    All I want is love
    Someone to see
    That’s all I need
    Somebody to be
    Somebody to be
    Somebody to be
    Good to me
    Good to me
    Can you be good to me
    Good to me
    Please

    Where do I go from here
    You’ve gotten under my skin
    And I don’t know how
    To get out of this place that I’m in

    I don’t ask for much
    All I want is love
    Someone to see
    That’s all I need
    Somebody to be
    Somebody to be
    Somebody to be
    Good to me
    Good to me
    Can you be good to me
    Good to me
    Please

    I don’t ask for much
    All I want is love
    Someone to see
    That’s all I need
    Somebody to be
    Someone to be
    Somebody to be
    Good to me
    Good to me
    Can you be good to me
    Good to me
    Please

    Yeah…………………..

    Be good to me………

    Or else……………