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Top Five Pop Lyrics That Sounded Deep When You Were 12

  • Writer: jamiecrow2
    jamiecrow2
  • 2 hours ago
  • 2 min read

At 12 years old, you’re convinced pop stars are basically poets. Every line feels like it carries the weight of the universe — heartbreak, destiny, the meaning of life. Then you grow up, hear the same lyric again, and think: wait… what?


Here are five pop lyrics that once felt poetic, intense, and soul-shaping — but now read a bit more like diary scribbles written during a maths lesson.


Teenagers singing and playing guitar

5. “If you wanna be my lover, you gotta get with my friends” – Spice Girls, “Wannabe” (1996)


Why 12-year-old you thought it was deep:

A bold feminist manifesto about loyalty, sisterhood, and the importance of friendship. Girl power! Sisterhood! Genuine values!


How it hits now:

It… sounds like they’re saying something completely different.

Still iconic. Still a banger. Maybe less of the deep feminist text you thought it was.


Adult translation:

“Respect my mates or jog on.”

Solid life advice, to be fair.




4. “No, I don’t want no scrub” – TLC, “No Scrubs” (1999)


Why it felt profound at 12:

This was the blueprint for avoiding future heartbreak. A relationship manifesto. A guide to self-worth. Even if you didn’t fully understand what a “scrub” was, you knew you didn’t want one.


How it hits now:

Technically, a scrub is just someone who’s broke with no car.

We were 12. Nobody had a car. Everyone was a scrub.


Adult translation:

“Don’t date someone whose life goal is borrowing your bus money.”




3. “It’s gonna take a lot to drag me away from you” – Toto, “Africa” (1982)


Why it felt deep:

It sounded like a grand, sweeping declaration of endless love. The emotional maturity! The sacrifice! The devotion!


How it hits now:

The whole song is basically vibes. Gorgeous vibes, but vibes nonetheless.

Geography, rain, and a line that basically says,


“Love you loads, but I’m not walking that far.”


Adult translation:

“I adore you, but if you need heavy lifting, call someone else.”




2. “Life is a rollercoaster, just gotta ride it” – Ronan Keating, “Life Is a Rollercoaster” (2000)


Why 12-year-old you thought it was profound:

This was practically Dalai Lama-level wisdom. A metaphor for resilience. A reminder that life has ups and downs, and you should hold on tight.


How it hits now:

It’s one step above a motivational poster in a GP’s waiting room.

Still catchy.

Still true.

Still something you might mutter during a stressful commute.


Adult translation:

“Life is chaos. Hang on and pray.”




1. “My heart will go on and on” – Céline Dion, My Heart Will Go On (1997)


Why 12-year-old you thought it was deep:

This wasn’t just a song — it was an emotion. The ultimate expression of eternal love, tragic romance, and soul-level devotion. Even if you hadn’t seen Titanic, you still acted like you understood heartbreak on a cosmic scale.


How it hits now:

It’s beautiful, yes. It’s iconic, absolutely. But the line “on and on” is… not exactly Einstein-level poetry. And adult you has discovered that hearts, unfortunately, do not always “go on.” Sometimes they go “nope.”


Adult translation:

“I will emotionally spiral for an undefined amount of time.”



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