I've been a million things in my life, And worn a million faces like masks in an eighteenth century opera house where they tell you to scream like you mean it and whispers are never heard because the crowd is already on their feet and the roses smell too sweet.
But today I wear nothing but my ego, My ego, So Jungian, Freudian, the sought-after prize of a million men who won't ever compete with my constellation scars or the sharp sound of my teeth clicking together in a cruel grin.
You hate girls that strut like they're concrete because you broke them all before, Because they're lies and false gods and you swear that youth today are all spat words and flying ***** not given.
I'm not youth today, I'm an age-old god of war and pride and I'll cut you down like a whisper in the wind if you try my patience...
Because what is death if not being forgotten? I'll forget you, if you try my patience. I've forgotten a million fragile egos and I'll crumble your concrete into pixelated dust like a million tiny claps in an eighteenth century opera house that can't tell if the blood on my hands is real.
I've been a million things in my life, But I'm finally the one that matters: unforgettable.