| Ain’t I fair, ain’t I kind |
| And I’m paid to feel fine |
| But I haven’t spent a dime since I met you |
| Your breasts are like two wrists that I’ve handcuffed to my dick |
| In a subculture of love and refraction |
| But I die every morning again |
| Me at my worst is fun for them |
| And I die with a feeding tube |
| While you try to fix my blues |
| Your city’s so unclean in a Washington machine |
| And your face is like a cage and two of them |
| And your sentiment is gone and you’re now enslaved by gods |
| While I strum my broken legs like a banjo |
| But I die every morning again |
| Me at my worst is fun for them |
| And I die with a feeding tube |
| While you try to fix my blues |
| But when I feel my heart retract into my soul |
| It makes an ego seem more valuable than gold |
| And I die every morning again |
| Me at my worst is fun for them |
| And I die with a feeding tube |
| While you try to fix my blues |