409 In Your Coffeemaker

Album: 1,039/Smoothed Out Slappy Hours (1990)
Play Video
  • I sit in the state of a daydream
    With all of your words flying over my head
    Even more time gets wasted
    In a daze

    It should seem obvious to you
    Your screams and cries are never going to work
    And all of your time gets wasted
    In my daze

    And I'm looking back now
    At where I have gone wrong
    And why I could not seem to get along
    My interests are longing
    To break from these chains
    These chains that control
    My futures aim...

    I sit in the state of a daydream
    With all of your words flying over my head
    Even more time gets wasted
    In a daze

    Maybe I'm just too damn lazy
    Or maybe I was just brain washed to think that way
    And all of your time gets wasted
    In my daze Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Lou Gramm - "Waiting For A Girl Like You"

Lou Gramm - "Waiting For A Girl Like You"They're Playing My Song

Gramm co-wrote this gorgeous ballad and delivered an inspired vocal, but the song was the beginning of the end of his time with Foreigner.

Song Titles That Inspired Movies

Song Titles That Inspired MoviesSong Writing

Famous songs that lent their titles - and in some cases storylines - to movies.

Macabre Mother Goose: The Dark Side of Children's Songs

Macabre Mother Goose: The Dark Side of Children's SongsSong Writing

"London Bridge," "Ring Around the Rosie" and "It's Raining, It's Pouring" are just a few examples of shockingly morbid children's songs.

Penny Ford of Snap!

Penny Ford of Snap!Songwriter Interviews

The original voice of Snap! this story is filled with angry drag queens, video impersonators and Chaka Khan.

David Sancious

David SanciousSongwriter Interviews

Keyboard great David Sancious talks about his work with Sting, Seal, Springsteen, Clapton and Aretha, and explains what quantum physics has to do with making music.

Jim Adkins of Jimmy Eat World

Jim Adkins of Jimmy Eat WorldSongwriter Interviews

Jim talks about the impact of "The Middle" and uses a tree metaphor to describe his songwriting philosophy.