(Music: Marillion Lyrics: Steve Hogarth & John Helmer)
It all began with the bright light The bright light and the noise The chaos of the senses and the scream of desire
Touching and being touched A million loose ends to tie up Ticking of the clock and the cradle rock
The colours stand still And then they move around Comin' in and out of focus upside down
Empty winter trees How space feels Love of the soft ... flowers and the sky
One fine day The chaos subsides Bleeds into awareness And a lifetime of surprise
The beauty of your mother's eyes The pain when you fall You drink it in and marvel at it all But you never really figure it out
You get used to it
The babble of the family And the dumb TV Roar of the traffic and the thunder of jets
Chemicals in the water Drugs in the food The heat of the kitchen and the beat of the system
The attitude of authority The laws and the rules Hit me square in the face, first morning at school
The heroes and the zeroes The first love of my life When to kiss and to kick and to keep your head down when they're choosing the sides I was never any good at it I was terrified most of the time I never got over it I got used to it
Alone in the city at seventeen With the hollow, the lonely The drowning and the drowned I was made to feel worthless The wretched and the mean Beat me up like a weapon I can't run away from or find a way round Holdin' on, holdin' on
The greed and the missiles Exploding somewhere every day Hideous dark secrets under the sea and in holes in the ground
The cold war's gone Those bastards'll find us another one They're here to protect you, don't you know? So get used to it Get used to it!
The clash of religions The loaded prayers Information The face of starvation and the state of the nation
The sense that it's useless And the fear to try Not believing the leaders, the media that feeds us Living with the big lie
You get used to it
Compositores: Ronald Stephen Hoggarth, Steven Thomas Rothery, Mark Colbert Kelly, Peter John Trewavas, Ian Francesko Mosley (Ian Mosley) ECAD: Obra #221441 Fonograma #17053304