Truly, with his thorn in your side
And you don't know why
Julie dips her toe in the tide
And she don't know why
No, she don't know why she got
All dolled up for a suicide
And when the stage lights dimmed on the fading scrim,
It was morning before the cheering died

Is it too late to tell you that I don't mind?

King George in imperial robe
And a lazy eye
Knelt down as the semaphore broke
On his tawdry bride
But we don't know why he got
All stressed out on the motherland
With his T.V. sets and his fighter jets
And the royal ubiquitous handycam

Is it too late to tell you that I don't mind?


Here's you with your mom on your back
Going into the woods
She's so proud that you're staying on track
Like a good son should
But you don't know why you got
All choked up when you said goodbye
And you can hear her still when the nights are still
All crying out for calamine

Is it too late to tell you that I don't mind?

Is it too late to tell you that I don't mind?



Lyrics submitted by sendthestars

Track duration: 04:39

"I Don't Mind" as written by Harry Stephen Laird Collier, Ben Langmaid, Jeffrey Patterson

Lyrics © Universal Music Publishing Group, Warner/Chappell Music, Inc., BMG RIGHTS MANAGEMENT US, LLC

Lyrics powered by LyricFind


I Don't Mind song meanings
Add your thoughts

28 Comments

sort form View by:
  • +1
    General Comment:I see the first verse as portraying an actress who feels jaded about her art - e.g. "getting dolled up for a suicide" as getting dressed up for a performance that will fail, even though the crowd seems to love it and applauds 'til morning. I do also like TheSFletcher's interpretation about the girl killing herself to get attention and the applause meaning others are happy to see her die (or at least, she sees others as being happy to see her die).

    Verse two is pretty confusing, mainly because of the unknown historical references and the general anachronism of semaphores vs. TV's and video recorders. I really haven't got a clue there.

    Verse three seems to me about a boy who's recently become an adult, going out into the world without his parents to guide him anymore. "Carrying his mom on his back" means carrying the memory of her, the things she taught him, etc. "The woods" refers to the uncertainty of adult life, but she's proud of him because he's "staying on track" and managing well for himself. However, the son still feels bad about leaving the mom, as when he imagines her crying out for calamine - I'm guessing the son used to nurse her when he still lived with her. Therefore the son is left with guilt that he can't care for her anymore. I guess it doesn't make sense that he WOULDN'T know why he was sad to say goodbye, but I guess it's because becoming independent is supposed to be seen as a generally happy event.

    The common thread holding these tales together is that all the characters "don't know why" they feel a certain way, or else others don't know why someone else feels a certain way, whether it be pursuing a career one sees as failing, becoming upset over a war(?), or becoming sad to leave a parent. However, the speaker "doesn't mind" these feelings, which connotes an attitude of acceptance. So maybe Colin is saying that everyone experiences feelings that are inexplicable or inappropriate for a situation, but ultimately it doesn't matter, because these unexplainable feelings are felt by all at one point or another. Basically, it's alright. He doesn't mind.

    That's my $.02, anyway.
    Flag blue.painted.tearson October 02, 2011   Link
  • 0
    General Comment:To me it's a song about 3 persons and their problems and how the protagonist doesn't mind and loves them all the same - but they've already met some terrible fates.
    Flag Thecowninjaon October 02, 2010   Link
  • 0
    My Interpretation:It may just be because I'm heading into this situation this year myself, but the last section reminds me of a son going off to college or simply moving out, into an unsure situation (aka the woods). His mother is constantly nagging him to be responsible (on his back), and while that annoys him, he inexplicably misses her once he's gone (but you don't know why you got / all choked up when you said goodbye). It isn't until later that he realizes the nagging meant she cared: "is it too late to tell you that I don't mind."
    Flag bebitchedon May 03, 2009   Link
  • 0
    General Comment:I don't think he left his mom in the woods, because it says he can hear her still crying out for calamine...and if he left her in the woods, and if she stayed in one place and cried out for something from there, why would it be calamine? ...wouldn't it be, "Help, I am stuck in the woods"? I think the "mom on your back" thing sounds really metaphorical, or at the very least it has a double meaning, because we so often use the phrase "on your back" metaphorically, so it's almost a reverse metaphor...he's playing with the bounds between literal and figurative.
    Flag mmrrrfffon September 28, 2008   Link
  • 0
    General Comment:I'm confused about most of this song, but something I'm sure of is that Julie is Juliet, as in Romeos. Hence the suicide and the stage references.
    Flag Sænon August 24, 2008   Link
  • +1
    General Comment:At any rate, I know there's this folktale the last verse might be referring to. In this folk tale, a king orders that all old people of such an advanced age must be taken into the mountains/forest to die, as not to be a burden on the rest of the populous. So a son, obeying the king, carries his mother on his back into the forest to leave her. As he is walking he notices that his mother is breaking branches above them. When he asks her why she replies that it is so he does not loose his way on the way back home and assures her son that she is not bitter at him for leaving her to die because he is only doing his duty to the king. The son is overcome by his mother's concern and kindness and instead of killing her, hides her. I can't remember what happens next, I probably heard this story when I was seven or so.
    Flag little sisteron February 19, 2008   Link
  • 0
    General Comment:she don't mind killing her because it's the best thing for both of them *
    Flag Low Feedbackon January 10, 2008   Link
  • 0
    General Comment:The repeated use of the sentence "don't know why" indicates that it's a lot about unknown things that has occured in the life of the narrator. It seems a bit like a family complex, and when she seem to be drowning his mother she might be doing that because she has a disease. So she don't mind killing her, because it's the best thing. Another part that makes me believe that she don't mind, is because she is a part of a theatre play in the first verse, and her character commits suicide and it feels good (hence the cheering of the audience). So she don't mind, but it must be too late to tell, because she's already been choked up and has said goodbye.
    Flag Low Feedbackon January 10, 2008   Link
  • 0
    General Comment:I think this song is to me him simply telling somone he doesnt mind the bad things they have done and he hopes that their assumptions about his judgement of their actions havn't caused them too much harm already.

    I think possibly this person is the Julie in the first verse and the other two are just metaphors, examples of people doing something wrong, (a sovereign failing his country or something (incidentally does anyone know if there was a king George anywhere with a lazy eye?) and someone leaving their mother to die in the woods and therefore letting down their family. but like i said i think the main event is the first verse and the next two are comparisons. thats just my take on it.
    Flag tomStrangeloveon December 27, 2007   Link
  • 0
    General Comment:To above poster:
    Calamine is right. It's the lotion you put on bug bites to ease the itching. And that makes total sense (to me anyways) because it's a woodland setting.
    Flag h_e_y_jackon September 15, 2007   Link

Add your thoughts

Log in now to tell us what you think this song means.

Don’t have an account? Create an account with SongMeanings to post comments, submit lyrics, and more. It’s super easy, we promise!

Back to top
explain