Sunday, June 11, 2017

Youtube daily report Jun 11 2017

Keep your distance from her Keep your distance from her

Would you give me a moment? Give me a try Don't leave me hanging, no, that isn't right

Why do we do this? Throw me a lie You like the attention, and you get what you like

I just wanna get you closer I don't wanna play these games

All you wanna be is wanted Makes your ego okay

Why you gotta tease me, baby? Why you gotta play these games?

Every time you come over I don't ever get no play

She's fucking wicked But I love the way she hurts me

I'm so addicted to her loving That girl is vicious

When you see her, be sure That you're keeping your distance

From her loving

I'm being the good guy, I'm being polite You tell me I'm too nice, maybe you're right

And I don't wanna hear that, I ain't your type What does that even mean, girl? Can I get a reply?

I just wanna get you closer I don't wanna play this games

All you wanna be is wanted Make sure he go, okay

Why you gotta tease me, baby? Why you gotta be this way?

Every time you come over I don't ever get no play

She's fucking wicked But I love the way she hurts me

I'm so addicted to her loving That girl is vicious

When you see her, be sure That you're keeping your distance Uh~

From her loving

Yeah, could list a million reasons why it wouldn't work She asked, "When the last time you had to put in work?"

She stopped my hand when I would try to put it up her skirt She don't wanna give it, she just wanna flirt

Pretty as a picture, but she do me dirt When she don't hit me back, I start to go berserk

Goddamn, babe, why you leave me hangin'? Why you playin'? Think she do it all for entertainment

Yeah, she should walk around with a warning sign "Do not touch, keep away, avoid the fine"

Super bad bitch, she ain't sorta fine Stayed over and she vanished by the mornin' time

Payed a pretty penny just to take her out And she ain't let me smash, we only makin' out

My homie told me, "Stay away, she trouble, bro" But I think I'm addicted to her lovin' though

She's fucking wicked (You know) But I love the way she hurts me

I'm so addicted to her loving That girl is vicious

When you see her, be sure That you're keeping your distance

From her loving

Keep your distance from her Keep your distance from her

For more infomation >> MANSIONZ-WICKED (feat. G-EAZY) /ENG CC/HUN CC/ - Duration: 3:39.

-------------------------------------------

What is the North Korean Prison System like? - Duration: 17:54.

You're looking at the Ryugyong Hotel in Pyongyang.

It's North Korea's tallest building, standing 105 stories.

Construction began on the hotel in 1987, and had it been completed according to schedule,

it would have opened in 1989.

It's been nicknamed "Hotel Doom" and I think you can see why.

But the original idea was pretty cool, I guess.

It would have been the world's tallest hotel and included 3,000 rooms for guests, for restaurants,

for rotating restaurants, for rotating residences...bells and whistles.

But at this point you might be wondering why I keep using these theoretical phrases, it

'would have been', it 'could have been'.

There were some delays.

Construction began in 1987, but by 1989 only the frame was done.

After the Soviet Union collapsed, foreign investment dried up for North Korea, and construction

stopped in 1992.

In 2008, they tried again, and in three years the facade was done.

They wanted to open the main hotel in 2013, but that was called off.

They reduced the number of guest rooms from 3,000 to 150.

Still, nothing.

To this day the Ryugyong Hotel remains unfinished- perhaps based on a nice idea, but ultimately

a 105 story, mysterious, authoritarian-looking, empty construction.

Like the rest of North Korea, a source of endless open questions and peculiarities for

people you and me.

6 kilometers, or 3.7 miles away lies an actual operating hotel, the Yanggakdo International.

This one actually has guests, rooms, even a nameless North Korean Draft Beer you can

order.

A night here runs about $350 US Dollars.

And it was in this hotel that this grainy footage was purportedly taken.

A shadowy figure approaches, takes something off the wall, and sets it down.

If you were to get in the Yanggakdo Hotel elevator you have access to 47 floors.

Well- 46- you can see in this picture the count goes 1,2,3,4,6- the fifth floor being

staff-only and despite having a couple videos snuck out showing dark hallways with propaganda

posters, we don't know the purpose of any of it.

Supposedly, that's what is being taken from the wall is this video: a North Korean propaganda

poster from the fifth floor of the Yanggakdo Hotel.

The authorities claim that the shadowy figure is Otto Warmbier, a visiting American Student

from Ohio.

He was there with the help of Young Pioneer Tours, a chinese company which organizes travel

to places 'your mother would rather you stayed away from'.

Though we're not sure 'how', or 'why', or even 'if' Warmbier did what they accused

him of doing, the story goes like this: during his winter visit to North Korea in late 2015,

Otto Warmbier stayed in the Yanggakdo Hotel in Pyongyang.

While staying there, he made his way to the staff-only 5th floor, took down a propaganda

poster which read, "Let's arm ourselves strongly with Kim Jong-il's patriotism".

He was arrested on January 2nd, 2016 at the Pyongyang Airport as he tried to leave the

country.

The evidence of this crime: the grainy, shadowy video.

And something more sinister to go along with it.

I'm going to show you footage from Warmbier's press conference 2 months after his arrest

in North Korea in which he addresses accusations that he's 'Committed Hostile Acts Against

the State'.

Now we can doubt the legitimacy of this statement on a number of grounds.

The first being that many foreign detainees before Warmbier have recounted their statements

once released from North Korea.

Second, it's apparent to me that the statement was written by a non-native speaker of English

and given to Warmbier to memorize.

I say that because there's no contractions in the entire statement, 'wouldn't'

becomes 'would not','can't' is always 'cannot', and the phrasing and vocabulary

are just weird.

Take a listen.

Add on to the odd phrasing the ludicrous circumstances Otto describes as his motivations.

Namely, that the mother of of a friend of his from Ohio wanted him to 'damage the

spirit of Korean workers' by stealing a sign with a slogan on it and bringing it back

to Ohio so they could hang it up in the Methodist church as an anti-communist trophy.

It was a leap year and Warmbier's trial was February 29th, 2016 before North Korea's

Supreme Court.That is the topic I want to go a little bit deeper with: North Korea's

peculiar Judicial System.

It was the DPRK's Supreme Court which tried Warmbier, and that's because it is the court

of first instance in situations with criminal acts against the nation, particularly when

foreigners are involved.

And their decisions are final.

There is no appeal process as the Supreme Court, at certain times called the Central

Court, is the highest court of appeals.

Below it are 12 provincial courts, usually paneled by three judges, which have initial

jurisdiction for grievous crimes, and which otherwise serve as the final court of appeal

for the 100 People's Courts which come below.

They're called People's Court because they usually are presided over by a single

judge with two civilian assessors to oversee the decisionmaking.

They're organized at the County level and have jurisdiction over everyday civil disputes

and criminal justice (NYU Law).

The North Korean state was founded on Marxist-Leninist ideology with heavy influence from Stalin's

Russia and Mao's China.

And as such, a Marxist might see a western justice system as a repression from the bourgeoisie

upon the working proletariat.

The North Korean solution to this was to use law as a hammer to nail state policy into

society (Goedde, 2008).

The People's assessors, laymen oversight in a court of law, is a staple of Communist

Justice Systems.

Along the same line, judges are able not only to give punishment to the convicted, but to

subject them to 'reeducation' programs highlighting the value of the worker's party

and the dictatorship of the proletariat (Goedde, 2008).

Overshadowing these outside influences is North Korea's first Supreme Leader Kim Il-Sung's

personal ideology called 'Juche'.

Loosely translated as 'self-reliance', 'Juche' mixes Nationalism into Communist

ideology in order to focus on three things: National independence, economic self-sustenance,

and national defense.

Shortly put, this is how the regime aimed to justify their cult of personality that's

lasted into the present era: follow me so we can achieve communism in our own Korean

way.

Juche was first incorporated into the North Korean Constitution in 1972.

In her work, Law "Of Our Own Style", Dr. Patricia Goedde describes 5 consequences Juche

had for the North Korean Judicial System "First, the law reflects the wishes and

interests of the working people (the dominant class).

Second, the law is a State instrument.

Third, citizens and all organizations have the duty to obey the law (as opposed to having

legal rights against the State).

Fourth, socialist law shall be perfected (eschewing bourgeois law), and, lastly, socialist law-abiding

life shall be promoted (making the observance of law a moral obligation)."

In this system, national sovereignty is paramount and the laws are a tool to that effect.

Both laws and rights emanate directly from the state, and by not leading a 'socialist

law-abiding life', you forfeit your rights.

Because the laws exist to protect the state and not the rights of citizens, the Judiciary

is not independent.

The Supreme Court of North Korea doesn't exercise judicial review over the new laws,

it doesn't provide precedents for constitutionality of executive actions- rather than acting as

a check, it merely serves as an additional rubber stamp for the regime.

The entire court system is accountable to the Supreme People's Assembly, the legislature

of North Korea.

When the Supreme People's Assembly is in recess (most of the time), the courts are

accountable to the much smaller Presidium of the Supreme People's Assembly.

Now stay with me, all candidates to the Supreme People's Assemblies are pre approved by

the Korean Worker's Party, which is controlled by the Chairman of the party- who is, you

guessed it, Kim Jong-un, Supreme Leader of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

Supreme Leader controls the Worker's Party, controls the Assembly, controls the courts.

Everything from the smallest theft to an Internationally watched show trial of a foreigner is under

direct supervision.

This likely explains the speculation that Otto Warmbier's arrest was a response to

international sanctions against North Korea.

By arresting an American citizen, they gained just the smallest bit of leverage in a geopolitical

game stacked heavily against them.

Hence, the showmanship and the scripted apology:

Now under the auspices of a Supreme Court Justice and by extension, the entire North

Korean power structure, the only thing left for Otto Warmbier was sentencing.

Even with the United States Administration demanding, "...the North Korean government

to pardon [Warmbier] and grant him special amnesty and immediate release,", he was sentenced

to 15 years of hard labor.

But 'where?'.

I'm going to use some subjective terminology with you in the rest of the video, but I think

it's justified justified: North Korean prison camps are horrible places full of starvation,

inhumane conditions, torture, public executions, sexual assault, and forced abortions.

According to eye-witness testimony from defectors and satellite imagery, it is estimated that

there are between 150,000 and 200,000 political prisoners in North Korea spread across 6 political

prison camps, though this information is always in flux due to the secrecy of the regime.

Another series of 15-20 reeducation camps are run by by the Ministry of People's Security.

A report by the National Commission of Human Rights of Korea states that, "[Political

Prison Camps] can be generalized into two types.

The first is the 'maximum security camp' or 'total control zone,' in which prisoners

are detained for life.

The second category, the 'high-security camp,' or 'revolutionary zone,' consists

of detention areas from which prisoners are released after having served a set prison

term."

In addition, generational imprisonment, though less common today than in the past, is still

practiced:"The government practices collective punishment, sending to forced labor camps

not only the offender but also their parents, spouse, children, and even grandchildren."

(2012 Human Rights Report).

Amnesty International became aware of a case in which a child was contained for 243 days

inside what they called, "a tiny 'torture cell"' where it is impossible to stand

or lie down."

Another common torture is so-called, 'Pigeon torture' in which a detainee is suspended

with their arms behind their center and are then hit repeatedly.

Every escapee with whom Amnesty International spoke "witnessed at least one public execution".

In 2002, the New York Times reported interviews with 35 escapees, "31 said they had witnessed

babies killed by abandonment or being smothered with plastic sheets.

Two defectors later described burying dead babies, and two said they were mothers who

saw their newborns put to death,"

A 2014 UN Human Rights Council report stated, "hundreds of thousands of political prisoners

have perished in these camps over the past five decades.

The unspeakable atrocities that are being committed against inmates of the kwanliso

political prison camps resemble the horrors of camps that totalitarian States established

during the twentieth century."

Add to all this the weak North Korean Judiciary we discussed earlier.

According to the US State Department Human Rights Report, "Members of the security

forces arrested and reportedly transported citizens suspected of committing political

crimes to prison camps without trial.

The UN Human Rights Report backs this up: "Persons who are found to have engaged in

major political crimes are "disappeared", without trial or judicial order, to political

prison camps,"

In addition, forced confessions are the norm.

Preliminary investigations are often full of torture; false statements of guilt are

coerced to stop the violence.

And the kind of crimes for which you can thrown into a political prison camp are very broad.

As The Committee for Human Rights in Korea put it, "...presumed political, ideological,

and sociological deviants deported to and imprisoned in the labor camps include persons

suspected of wrong-doing... being on the "wrong" or losing side of a bureaucratic, factional,

or political dispute within the Korean Workers' Party...wrong-thinking includes expressing

or supporting ideas at variance with the official ideology...wrong-association is being part

of a family...whose patriarch was part of a purged faction of the Korean Worker's

Party….wrong-class," having anything to do with private property or land-owning.

As you might imagine, a system like this also leads to the imprisonment of many 'unwanteds'

from society.

Consider then, know what we know about the conditions of the camps from a variety of

sources- consider being sent there guilty of no real crime.

What became of Otto Warmbier?

As of the making of this video it remains unclear.

He does have an advantage over native North Korean prisoners.

There's no incentive for the government to keep its native prisoners alive, and it's

estimated 40% of inmates die from malnutrition (Amnesty International).

But as an American detainee, he's a more valuable bargaining chip for the North Korean

government if he's kept in relatively good health.

This is evidenced by other American detainees released early after being given heavy and

long labor sentences; most after around 150 days.

There could be a similar case for Otto Warmbier.

But there's no guarantee.

A south Korean-American Kenneth Bae was held 735 days and was sent to a labor camp during

that time.

Robert Park, a christian minister was arrested in 2010 and was tortured in 3 different labor

camps before being released 43 days later.

And if you're keeping track, Otto Warmbier was arrested January 2nd, 2016, which means

he's already way beyond the average imprisonment for American detainees.

It's absolutely possible he's been sent to a labor camp, though if Kenneth Bae is

any precedent, he's alone, guarded by a team and escorted daily for work,

as Bae was briefly allowed to explain to CNN in an interview he gave during his time in

guard, and there's one doctor," We can't know if Warmbier is receiving similar

treatment.

Since his trial, Otto's family has received only one letter from him.

"On April 23 Ri Su Yong, North Korea's foreign minister, defended jailing Mr Warmbier but

suggested that, as with past detainees, he may not serve his full sentence."

(The Telegraph).

And let me pause just for a second to clear something up with you.

I use Warmbier as a way of bringing you into this story, but don't think that this is

an attempt to micro focus on American victims.

All of the thousands of Koreans- real people- living through excruciating conditions right

now in the North Korean detention camps deserve a fair justice system.

While western leaders stress over Pyongyang's nuclear program, while South Korea low balls

the cost of reunification, while China embarrasses itself by handing political refugees back

to the North Korean authority knowing full well they'll end up in these detention centers-

while all that's going on, human crisis occurs everyday behind the barbed wire of

North Korea's death camps every single day, and we shouldn't forget it.

I think, however, it's important to just take a step back from the geopolitical pressures-

to acknowledge the hundreds of thousands of Korean victims of the broken judicial system,

and to recognize that it, like the Democratic People's Republic of Korea is ultimately

a doomed, mysterious, authoritarian, and empty construction.

For more infomation >> What is the North Korean Prison System like? - Duration: 17:54.

-------------------------------------------

Learn Colors With Animals Fox Number Colors For Kids - Learn Colours For Children Toddlers - Duration: 3:17.

Learn Colors With Animals Fox Number Colors For Kids - Learn Colours For Children Toddlers

For more infomation >> Learn Colors With Animals Fox Number Colors For Kids - Learn Colours For Children Toddlers - Duration: 3:17.

-------------------------------------------

Tumori, una vitamina può abbassare il rischio| K.N.B.T - Duration: 2:13.

For more infomation >> Tumori, una vitamina può abbassare il rischio| K.N.B.T - Duration: 2:13.

-------------------------------------------

Ultime notizie: Pressione alta? Potassio aiuta ad abbassarla| K.N.B.T - Duration: 2:34.

For more infomation >> Ultime notizie: Pressione alta? Potassio aiuta ad abbassarla| K.N.B.T - Duration: 2:34.

-------------------------------------------

My social anxiety | Riley J. Dennis - Duration: 7:16.

Hey everybody!

So today is gonna be like more of a personal video.

I haven't done a video like this in a long time so it feels a little weird, but bear with me.

Basically, I just kinda wanna talk about my personal experience with social anxiety.

Hopefully, people who have social anxiety will be to relate and realize that they're

not alone, and hopefully people who don't have social anxiety will be able to see what

life is like with it.

But do stick around until the end of the video because there's a really cool online mental

health service that I wanna tell you all about.

But, okay, so, let's start with my personal experience.

So, I've had social anxiety for about as long as I can remember.

But when I was young, I definitely thought it was something that I was going to grow out of.

But that did not happen.

Like, I remember when I was a teenager, and I needed to start, like, calling people and

going to appointments and stuff, it was really really stressful for me, and I would not be

able to call someone for hours.

Like, my heart rate would get going really fast, and I'd get sweaty, and I couldn't call the person.

Like, I would dial the number, and put it down, and step away for a few minutes, and

come back to it.

And it just -- it kept happening.

Like, I would stare at the phone for literally hours, and I couldn't do it.

But I thought like if I just forced myself to make the calls and forced myself to interact

with people, like eventually I would just kinda get used to it, and it would fade away.

That definitely did not happen.

I still really really anxious in social situations -- or in pretty much any situation where I

have to be interacting with another person.

Especially in like large group situations.

Like one-on-one things, I'm usually generally okay with, but group scenarios, I will just

shut down and, like, be sweaty and my heart beating, and just not really able to deal with it.

Like for everyone who has social anxiety, they have different symptoms, and there are

different ways that you can experience it.

Like some people react more strongly to certain situations, and not others, and some people

feel like nauseous, while others just have like a really fast heart rate, or other hyperventilate.

And there are varying degrees of how much it can interfere with your life.

So for some people, they have like very strong social anxiety, and it interferes with their life every day.

Like, they're not able to go out to meet people, um, or to talk on the phone, or anything like that.

And for some people, it might be less common, but it still happens like once a week or pops

up when certain situations are around, or something like that.

And some people might be somewhere in the middle.

I've definitely gotten pretty good at dealing with mine more recently, but it's still definitely

there, and like, no matter how much I try to get myself to be okay with talking to people

and being in groups and stuff, the physical symptoms, like just getting really sweaty

and my heart beating really fast, and just feeling so so nervous and self-conscious,

are things that I cannot get rid of.

I can power through them, and I can continue to be in social situations with those symptoms,

but like, that is always there.

To a degree that I know it isn't for other people because I've talked to people who don't

have social anxiety and for whom that is just fine -- like they can go into social situations

and they don't feel the way that I feel.

But I also realize that I don't have it to the degree where like I can't leave my house

during the day.

I'm usually pretty okay to leave my house, but there are definitely times where it does

interfere with my life.

Like, I remember one time I was visiting my girlfriend at the time, and she had a bunch

of her friends that she wanted me to meet, and I was just terrified of meeting all these

new people and like having to make small talk with them, and having to like impress all

of them, and just be in this huge group of people that I didn't know, and I just refused to go.

I just didn't go.

I was like, I'm sorry I came all the way here, but like, I can't.

I'm freaking out, and I can't do that.

And that sucked, and wasn't great for our relationship.

There's been times where I've been travelling and like I will go to a place, like I will

spend 45 minutes trying to figure out the public transportation of the city or the country

that I'm in, and I'll get to some place that I googled and thought was cool, and I'll go

up to it, and I can't go in.

A lot of the times this is like if there's a coffee shop or something where there's not

like, the walls aren't windows, and like you can't see into the place.

I'm just really nervous of like who's in there and like what they're expecting me to say or do.

So this has happened to me before where if I get to the place and I can't see inside,

and I can't judge the situation and the people, I just can't do it.

And like no matter how long it took me to get there, I will just leave.

Like I remember one time, I went really far out of my way to find this cafe, cause I looked

it up online and thought it would be cool, and I just could not get myself to go in.

And I just left.

And that happens a lot when I'm like meeting friends as well.

Like there was one time I was just meeting friends in Los Angeles, like a totally normal

thing to do, we were meeting at like a restaurant or a bar or something.

As I was walking there, I just got petrified of the idea of like trying to walk into this

place full of people I don't know and like trying to find a couple of friends who I wasn't

like super close friends with.

And I almost just like turned around and left.

Like, I did turn around for a while, but eventually, I talked myself into going back, and I actually

like walked back and forth a few times.

Eventually like texted someone and was able to meet them and go inside with them.

But the point is that it like interferes with my life in that way in those situations.

Um, a lot of the time, I just won't be able to ask for things.

Like if someone fucks up my order at Starbucks, I'm just gonna drink whatever drink they give

me because I do not have the ability to go up and ask them for another thing.

Like, that would just freak me out too much, and I'd be too nervous and anxious -- and, nope.

It's just -- it's not, worth it to me.

And there are times when my symptoms have been much worse, when I've felt like physically

nauseous from the idea of going to a place or from being in a place where I don't know anyone.

Like social anxiety is a mental thing -- it is in your head -- but it also like very real

physical symptoms.

And parties are just the worst.

Like, if I don't know like everyone at a party, I will probably just shut down and like hide

in the corner or just like not go at all.

There's been so many times where I'm like invited to a thing with people who I kind

of know, and I just can't get myself to go because there are so many people that I won't know.

And like I really want to, like these are things that I want to do, and if I didn't

have these symptoms of social anxiety, that I would do.

So it kinda sucks, but it's been much worse in the past.

And I feel like I'm pretty good at dealing with it at this point.

But I was also never able to see a therapist about it because therapists, even if you have

insurance, are really expensive, and it's hard to find someone who's like attuned to

your specific needs.

Like, if you're a trans person, and you go to a therapist, and they are transphobic,

that's not gonna work out great for you.

So this is the part of the video where I wanna tell you about an online mental health service

that I really like.

This company called BetterHelp reached out to me and asked if I wanted to make a video

about my own mental health struggles.

And I was really nervous about putting a video on the internet that was so personal.

But I really like what they're doing, and I wanna tell all of you about it in case you're

struggling with your mental health and need someone to talk to but can't go see a traditional therapist.

BetterHelp is a website and an app where you can access professional counseling services.

So you can use BetterHelp on your computer or tablet or smartphone, and you can talk

to a professional counselor either through live chat or messages or a phone call or a video call.

The live chat feature is really cool because I mean one of the things about social anxiety

is that it's hard to talk to someone face to face even like a counselor.

So the live chat feature could make things a lot easier for someone who's not able to

talk to a therapist face to face and has an easier time putting down their emotions and

feelings in written words.

Normally to see a counselor, even with insurance, it can be super expensive and inconvenient

and time-consuming, but the ability to access counseling services like from your phone,

wherever you are, is so cool.

If you go to BetterHelp to sign up, they can match you with a professional counselor in

less than 24 hours.

Their prices start at $35 a week, which is way cheaper than traditional counseling services.

And in the comments, let me know about your struggles with mental health or social anxiety specifically.

And yeah, that's all I wanted to talk about today.

Thank you so much for watching this video.

I love you all, and I'll see you next time.

For more infomation >> My social anxiety | Riley J. Dennis - Duration: 7:16.

-------------------------------------------

Adını Sen Koy 57 Bölüm1-- ألف تخطط لهروب الخاطف -- سمه ما شئت - - Duration: 11:41.

For more infomation >> Adını Sen Koy 57 Bölüm1-- ألف تخطط لهروب الخاطف -- سمه ما شئت - - Duration: 11:41.

-------------------------------------------

(Free) Real Instrumental Rap Hip Hop Beat // Currensy Type Beat 2017 // Prod. D-Low Beats - Duration: 4:25.

Buy 1 Get 6 For Free. www.d-lowbeats.net

For more infomation >> (Free) Real Instrumental Rap Hip Hop Beat // Currensy Type Beat 2017 // Prod. D-Low Beats - Duration: 4:25.

-------------------------------------------

AKİNATORA KENDİMİ SORDUM ! - Duration: 7:50.

For more infomation >> AKİNATORA KENDİMİ SORDUM ! - Duration: 7:50.

-------------------------------------------

Luồng trực tiếp của Channel K-Misaki - Duration: 19:22.

For more infomation >> Luồng trực tiếp của Channel K-Misaki - Duration: 19:22.

-------------------------------------------

Luồng trực tiếp của Channel K-Misaki - Duration: 11:09.

For more infomation >> Luồng trực tiếp của Channel K-Misaki - Duration: 11:09.

-------------------------------------------

Arty - Idea of You (Lyrics / Lyric Video) feat. Eric Nam - Duration: 3:41.

Or do I just

Idea of you

Idea of you

Or do I just miss the idea of you

Do I miss you

Idea of you

Or do I just miss the idea of you

Do I miss you

Or do I just miss the idea

Do I miss you

I don't really know at all

All that I know is

oh no

my heart feels more like a stone

All that I know is

Or do I just

Idea of you

Idea of you

Or do I just miss the idea of you

Do I miss you

Idea of you

Or do I just miss the idea of you

Do I miss you

Still I don't know

bed feeling cold

up all alone

Yeah I've been

Does that make it right

you on my mind

up late at night

Cause I've been

Can't let go

But there's a chance I'm holding on

Should be moving on

Oh yeah yeah yeah

I know

Just to keep the feeling going

Staring at a photo

Or do I just

Idea of you

Idea of you

Or do I just miss the idea of you

Do I miss you

Idea of you

Or do I just miss the idea of you

Do I miss you

Still I don't know

bed feeling cold

up all alone

Yeah I've been

Does that make it right

you on my mind

up late at night

Cause I've been

Yeah I know

So why this feeling in my chest

Said it's for the best

Yeah I know

Lost you and then I lost myself

Haven't been myself

No comments:

Post a Comment