

Without Lucid Dreams there will be no Come and Go. One song reflects a troubled history, while the other shows growth, and doubt. This is why the two songs are intertwined. Wrld is still taking pills, not only that, but he is insecure about himself because of what happened in his past “You tell me ain’t nobody better than me/I think that there's better than me.” If Lucid Dreams was about the mistakes you make after a break up, then Come and Go is about the difficulty of accepting yourself after all those mistakes. He thanks god and accepts all the pain he previously felt as obstacles that he needed to surpass in order to grow “I'm thankin' God that he made you part of the plan/I guess I ain't go through all that Hell for nothin'.” However Come and Go is not a happy song. The song is not about an evil woman anymore, it’s about the right one. I couldn’t sleep, so I drank to feel peace, and rest. When I was young and stupid my first real girlfriend broke up with me and for months I would get black out drunk. At some point he even thought he was better off dead “You were my everything/ Thoughts of a wedding ring/ Now I'm just better off dead (Uh, uh, uh).” I’ve been in his situation before. He feels so beaten from this experience he turns to Xanax, a legal, yet highly addictive anti-anxiety medicine to make him feel better. If we take a look back to Lucid Dreams––the song that rose him to prominence––it’s all about a girl that played with his emotions and left. He was only twenty one, but he had already had his fair share of addictions and along with evil girls, and love, it’s one of his constant themes. Juice had a tragic accidental overdose in December 2019. Juice Wrld Come and Go is a tragic reminder of the effects personal insecurities can have. But he knows who is - is looking out for him. Imperfect and flawed, he’s riding the waves of salvation simply because he knows who died to save him. There’s no hope for them until that changes. Their relationship to this world, even in condemning it and judging it, is what severs their connection to their Maker. What makes him “something” is he knows he’s just another imperfect sinner, sure - but his intrinsic acceptance that God’s got his back is a faith that, again, so many “Christians” are missing the point on. The artist is proving he’s so much more than the “nothing” he believes he portrays at times by the genuine relationship he obviously has with his creator. He throws his faith into his song, his statement, which is sparked by the personal failures he alludes to and he just explodes into authenticity by keeping it real and not omitting the offensive expletives and references to carnal sin that so many “Christians” would be appalled at outwardly but 100 percent identify with in their souls. I love the confidence in referencing God as his truth/the truth and yet he doesn’t mask his prayer behind some lofty attempt at ecclesiastical sentiment. I guess I ain't go through all that hell for nothin'” I'm thankin' God that he made you part of the plan “I pray to god that he make me a better man, uh “You tell me, ain't nobody better than me I think that there's better than me Hope you see the better in me

“I'm always fucking up and wrecking shit, It seems like I perfected it” Head up, baby, stay strong, we gon' live long Sayin' goodbye to bygones, those are bygones My mistakes probably wipe all the rights I've done Guess I got it all wrong, all along, my fault Then you tell me that I shoulda stayed in the room This type of love don't always come and go Hope you see the better in me, always end up betterin' me You tell me, ain't nobody better than me, I think that there's better than me I offer you my love, I hope you take it like some medicine I'm always fuckin' up and wreckin' shit, it seems like I perfected it I guess I ain't go through all that Hell for nothin' I'm thankin' God that He made you part of the plan I pray to God that He make me a better man, uh But sometimes I come out as bein' nothin'
