Lyrics for Into The Fire as interpreted by sethbrown

Into The Fire Lyrics
Come on, come on
Put your hands into the fire
Explain, explain
As I turn and meet the power
This time, this time
Turning white and senses dire
Pull up, pull up
From one extreme to another

From the summer to the spring
From the mountain to the air
From Samaritan to sin
And it’s waiting on the end

Come on, come on
Put your hands into the fire
Explain, explain
As I turn and meet the power
This time, this time
Turning white and sense dire
Pull up, pull up
From one extreme to another

From the summer to the spring
From the mountain to the air
From Samaritan to sin
And it’s waiting on the end

And now I’m alone I’m looking out, I’m looking in
Way down, the lights are dimmer
Now I’m alone I’m looking out , I’m looking in
Way down, the lights are dimmer

Ooooh

Come on, come on
Put your hands into the fire
Come on, come on

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  • 17 Comments
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jsw
02-06-2005

Rated 0 
I can't believe nobody has commented on this song, possibly the best fromt he album.

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charleigh123
03-26-2005

Rated 0 
I think the song is meant to mean do something that you wouldnt ever do, like you only live once. its got a good tune and good use of words to go with it

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music*ismyboyfriend
04-14-2005

Rated 0 
Yeah i think so so too, I think its just about how later in life you regret all the stuff you didnt do, and how as time goes on everything changes, and you might never have the chance to do that thing again. And i think its about how he loved someone but never took the chance, so now hes just looking in on her life regreting it all.

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Frau
12-21-2005

Rated 0 
I don´t really know what to say about this song, only that this is one of my favorites, and is always relaxing

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getoverit615
04-23-2006

Rated 0 
lol i have no idea what this song is about.. but for some reason i love it

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Confused Sharon
04-24-2006

Rated 0 
What does "put your hand into the fire" and "turn and meet the power" mean? somehow it just sounds demonic

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thirteensenseskid
06-27-2006

Rated 0 
i love this song! i also think it means taking a risk and about doing something you've never done before. i love the bit where it says 'turning white and senses dying' because when you burn metal in fire it turns white. 'turn and meet that power' does sound demonic but i think it is talking about consequences because when you put your hands into the fire, you meet the power and that could be a bad thing but you never know unless you try it.

it could also mean putting your hand into your heart and finding your true self because i think the heart is the organ of fire.

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derek808
01-12-2007

Rated 0 
i think that" turning white and senses dying" refers to how the sensation of doing something you never thought you could do or thought you should do can seem like its so powerful that it's burning you up until you can't feel anything but it. I also think that " turn and meet the power" means to gather all the courage and inner strength that you have in order to do what it is you need to do. A Truely great song . . .

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Adalid
01-18-2007

Rated 0 
Magic, Faith.

Facing one calling, turning oneself to the uknown. Changing despite everything, an enligthened leaving for further pursuits.

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not you
04-07-2007

Rated 0 
Am i the only person who knows what "put your hands into the fire" actually means?
Well for those who dont know the saying "put your hands into the fire" is synonymus with endurance and is another way of saying "tough it out". I just needed to say that, because it appears there are alot of people who dont know.

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TeenAgeKicks
07-07-2007

Rated 0 
turn and meet the power I agree sounds a little wierd but i agree with Derek808

its an amazing song with amazing vocals.

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simtech113
09-18-2007

Rated 0 
I think possibly the bit that says Turning white and sense dire
Pull up, pull up
From one extreme to another,

it seems to say to me turning white as in with fear, and pull up because life is going down, but when you do pull up instead of becoming normal you just go the exact opposite, like messing things up making life scary, to just almost withdrawing.

Sounds weird I know but yeah.

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musicandlyrics
12-16-2007

Rated 0 
actually this song is about september 11th

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Axiomatic Axiomatic
01-14-2008

Rated +1 
Rrrright. Every song is about 9/11.

Anyway, are we sure it's "Turning white and senses dire"?
It's always sounded more like "Turning white and senses dying" to me, because that's how I imagine your senses dying would be like. Fade to white.

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Broken_and_Hollow
09-15-2008

Rated 0 
I agree with thirteensenseskid that it means having the courage to take a risk and do something you've never done, or perhaps even dreamed of doing, before.

The phrase "turning white and senses dying" really sticks with me, and I agree with derek808 in that it refers to the sensation you feel when you're doing that new 'thing'.

Another part that sticks with me is the part that says "From the summer to the spring, From the mountain to the air, From Samaritan to sin, And it’s waiting on the end". To me, from the summer to the spring refers to the fact that everything must, in a way, die before it may truly live. The summer is usually a time of droughts, and, conversely, the spring is the time when the earth is at its 'greenest'. In the summer, things dry out and die if they don't have enough water, but once the spring comes, the earth regains its vitality.

This 'death before life' also refers to the way in which plants must die before they become seeds and grow once more.

And humans are said to have come from the earth. Perhaps we are similar in this way.

The 'death before life' could also refer to something such as facing your fears. I know that when I'm afraid to do something, I sort of, in a way, die a little inside. . .somewhat. But once I actually face my fears and do whatever it is that I was afraid of, I usually feel better. . .like a new part of me was awakened.

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PoetPhilosopher
02-06-2009

Rated 0 
I can never resist when someone says: I can't believe nobody has commented on this song.... So here goes my interpretation which naturally carries with it all the baggage that I do. I see this song with the eyes of a Gen-X child in the light of the Age of The Aquarius when many of us will be spiritually enlightened, yet will paradoxically move away from organised religion - where spirituality will take importance and religion fade into history.

This is by no means a happy feel-good song, but I am sure we can all agree that it feels good listening to this song because it stirs some emotion in us. For me, it's catharsis - release of a certain angst. The repetitions of both the lyrics and the melody contribute to the build-up from a somewhat optimistic blind faith to a more resigned anguish and despair - giving voice to our own emotional upheavals, thereby providing a much needed relief.

Come on, come on - Put your hands into the fire
Explain, explain - As I turn and meet the power
-----> The song title and the first lines make reference to getting into the fire - fire is widely known for purification - from the purification of gold; to sterilising surgical instruments; to banishing evil from witches burned at the stake; and the biblical baptism of fire...etc. The significance of fire for spiritual cleansing is clear when read with the following lines where we seek an explaination for putting our hands into the fire - we do so to turn from our lives, from what we were taught, what we have, what we know - to turn to meet the true power of spirituality - to be one with the higher consciousness.

This time, this time - Turning white and senses dire
-----> This time is significant because we have felt fear many times in our lives, but this time, the fear is so great, we turn pale from it. But what fears are so terrifying it turns us white? There comes a time when a soul experiences The Terrors of the Threshold - the terrors being our demons that are holding us within this threshold - limiting our spiritual growth. It is an inner challenge - the test that when we pass, will take us to the next level of spiritual growth. To conquer the Terrors of the Threshold, the soul needs to look at itself honestly in the mirror and confront those fears. One has to re-evaluate his senses, meaning how he used to sense or see the world, and to sense and see world in a different light is to question one's senses, and that's when one's senses are dire.

Pull up, pull up - From one extreme to another
-----> Pull up draws the metaphor of a pilot in a plane nose-diving into the ground. From one extreme to another describes how from almost crashing down into the ground, the pilot manages to pull up and soar upwards high into the sky. This resembles a spiritual transition known as The Dark Night of The Soul - when we feel like we have been abandoned by our higher power and we question our own existence and our belief systems. In questioning our beliefs, our faiths may be strengthened - we reinforce what we know in our hearts as true and shed the false pretences and falacies of most religions. If we manage to pull up, if we can figure out what is real and what is not, the soul soars the skies. The dark night occurs to those who do not seek merely a relationship, but full immersion or unity in the higher consciousness, with the higher power.

From the summer to the spring
-----> Conventionally, summer is known as a time when flowers are in full bloom - on one level, it describes a soul that sees itself being in full glory - fully grown - but it is only fooling itself since it has much growing to do still - because it thinks it is in its days of glory, forgetting that it is in spring that new growth occurs. On another level, between summer and spring is autumn and winter when death occurs - the death of one's old self is necessary before new growth happens.

From the mountain to the air
-----> A mountain is seen as a magnificent indestructable solid structure that is steadfast and strong. Air on the other hand is weightless, can't be seen or held in one's hand, not substantial or solid. Yet the transition to a higher level of faith calls for a move from the mountain to the air - it is not called faith when it is in your face, it is called faith only when you believe in something you cannot see, feel or touch. A mountain is like knowing. Air is like believing. Moving from what you know to what you believe is the mark of true faith. This also coincides with the Terrors of the Threshold - the mountain though solid is limiting, there is only that far you can go on a mountain. The Air on the other hand is limitless - literally, the sky is the limit. Imgaine jumping off a mountain into the air - from stability to nothing - it's not called a leap of faith for nothing. It may bring fear to the bravest of hearts, but the unlimited power of a soul being in the air, as opposed to being on a mountain, is a new level of enlightenment.

From Samaritan to sin
-----> This may seem like a deviation from previous verses, but it is not. This is a definite biblical reference - superficially, the Samaritan being good and sin being an act in defiance of God. This is conventional judeao-christianity where it has been taught that going against God is a sin. But on a deeper level, the reference to being a Samaritan is also a reference to following the bible blindly and doing so is obviously wrong, but would not following the bible blindly be an act in defiance against God? Upon greater reflection, is not following the bible blindly an act of defiance to the church or God? Can following religious dogma written by the hands of man used in the early days as a political tool to control the masses be more important that listening to the voice of God now, today, alive and speaking directly to you when you open your heart to Him? Here's where spirituality triumphs over religion.

From the summer to the spring - From the mountain to the air
From Samaritan to sin - And it’s waiting on the end
-----> It makes sense to read these lines together. Each of the first 3 phrases refer to a transformation that is waiting to happen - waiting on the metamorphasis to be complete, much like a caterpillar waiting for itself to turn.

And now I’m alone
-----> Those who are going through the Dark Night feel alone and totally stranded, knowing it's a solitary path no one else will or can understand. The feeling of being alone also comes because there is confusion of whether we belong in the old world or the new - the transition is a place of exile where we belong to neither.

And now I’m alone I’m looking out,
I’m looking in, Way down,
-----> Looking out describes seeing the world around us - it is significant that this path is walked alone, since we are at our most honest when we are alone. Looking in describes seeing ourselves for who we really are and way down, describes the re-evaluation with true depth.

the lights are dimmer
-----> Great darkness comes only in preparation for the great light at the end of the journey. Only through the test of complete darkness can true faith emerge - there is little value in faith that is un-tested. We are nearing the end we were waiting for earlier - for when we have survived the pitch black that can't get any dimmer, the light will break through and great enlightenment will occur.

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apple4ever
09-20-2009

Rated 0 
I think this about someone dying, or the moment after they died:

"Come on, come on
Put your hands into the fire"

The moment of death- enter the "white light.

"Explain, explain
As I turn and meet the power"

IE Meeting God.

"This time, this time
Turning white and senses dire"

Pretty much dying...

"And now I�m alone I�m looking out, I�m looking in
Way down, the lights are dimmer"

Down on Earth as an Angel (looking in), up in Heaven (Way down).


Just one interpretation...


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