From the album Blue Angel Sparkling Silver 2
This is about offering total devotion to someone who can't receive it because they're too busy self-destructing. The narrator promises to follow anywhere, but the bridge reveals the real problem: they're being accused of hollow declarations while the person they're devoted to is the one who can't mean anything they say. The whole song is the narrator trying to prove presence to someone who mistakes emotional erasure for love.
You'll stop smoking before your lungs go black
The narrator speaks for the other person's future with odd certainty, like they're trying to believe the promise more than the person making it. It sets up the entire dynamic: the narrator holding faith in changes that won't happen.
Do you wanna keep your last name?
Marriage gets floated as a question, not a proposal. It's one more hypothetical the narrator will follow if the other person wants it, but there's no independent desire here. Just mirroring.
Your boyfriends have girlfriends / You say you can't keep track of time
The person being sung to is tangled in messy relationships they won't organize, claiming time blindness when confronted. The narrator sees the chaos but still promises to dive wherever they dive. Might be enabling, might be powerless devotion.
You say I love you / But you don't mean it
The bridge flips the whole song. The narrator has been offering unconditional availability, and now they're the one accused of empty words. The narrator would be shocked to realize that total self-erasure might look like absence, that mirroring someone completely is a way of not being real.
The song ends stuck in the same loop it started in: the narrator offering to go, swim, dive, give. The bridge suggests the devotion might be the problem, not the solution, but the narrator can't stop performing it. Nobody here knows how to be present in a way the other person can actually receive.