When you look at the world
What is it that you see
People find all kinds of things
That bring them to their knees

I see an expression
So clear and so true
That it changes the atmosphere
When you walk (in)to the room

So I try to be like you
Try to feel it like you do
But without you it's no use
I can't see what you see
When I look at the world

When the night is someone else's
And you're trying to get some sleep
When your thoughts are too expensive
To ever want to keep

When there's all kinds of chaos
And everyone is walking lame
You don't even blink now do you
Or even look away

So I try to be like you
Try to feel it like you do
But without you it's no use
I can't see what you see
When I look at the world

I can't wait any longer
I can't wait 'til I'm stronger
Can't wait any longer
To see what you see
When I look at the world

I'm in the waiting room
I can't see for the smoke
I think of you and your holy book
When the rest of us choke

Tell me, tell me
What do you see
Tell me, tell me
What's wrong with me



Lyrics submitted by archmastermind

Track duration: 04:17

"When I Look at the World" as written by Larry Mullen Paul Hewson

Lyrics © Universal Music Publishing Group

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When I Look At The World song meanings
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16 Comments

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  • -1
    General Comment:I like the pope interpretation. I always imagined the smoke referred to the incense burned so often in Catholic churches. To one person it might be spiritual and meaningful, but to another it might just be a bunch of smoke.
    Flag JackRubyon October 08, 2011   Link
  • -2
    General Comment:This song cnfuses me. Though I love it so, the last verse doesn't really fit in with the rest of the song. "I think of you and your holy book..." So this song was about God or Jesus?! WHY?! It doesn't sound like it in the beginning- and "So I try to be like you" suddenly sounds like the most pretensious statment ever, in a raw song of real emotion.
    The person the singer is trying to be lie is someone who's seen the whole world and is hardened to it, no longer pained by the awful sights of the suffering going on around him or her. The singer tries to shut it out like this person, but can't help noticing and wanting to do something about it. Very sad, IMO. The music cnveys a sense of helplessness, especially in these lines-
    "I can't wait any longer. I can't ait till I'm strnger."

    Then there are these lines. I'm sure most people have felt like this at least once in their lives-

    "When the night is someone ese's, and you're trying to get some sleep... when your thoughts are too expensive to ever want to keep..."

    eminds me of waking up in a hot summer night, bursting full of ideas but unable to get out of bed to write them down. Or the genera feeling of trying to shut your brain off before going to sleep- all those thoughts tumbling through.
    Flag EnduringChillon July 16, 2011   Link
  • -1
    General Comment:i dont think there are any U2 songs totally and truly about God (except The End of the World, and maybe All I Want Is You)

    i think its about Ali, or someone Bono looks up to

    "So, I try to be like you
    Try to feel it like you do
    But without you, it's no use
    I can't see what you see
    When I look at the world"

    like a hero, you want to be like them but it doesnt work like that.

    this song reminds me of the best guy in my life and how much i want to be a great person like him
    Flag nowaynotmeon January 29, 2009   Link
  • +2
    General Comment:The song is about a person's faith being troubled by tragedy. It has been described by Bono in the book U2 by U2 as being told from "the point of view of someone who is having a crisis of faith looking at someone who has built their house upon the rock."
    Flag Hammaloon May 06, 2008   Link
  • +1
    General Comment:To Nightvid:

    The song IS about God; Bono even alluded to this by hanging a crucifix from his mike before he sang this song at a concert I attended.

    Bono is simply making a statement -- a rhetorical question, if you will -- when he mentions "You don't even blink, now do you?" It is a statement of reassurance of that fact, to himself and to the listeners of this song. It is a statement made in awe -- not a question he expects God to answer.

    And as to the other verse that starts, "When the night is someone else's, and you're trying to get some sleep/When your thoughts are too expensive to ever want to keep", the "YOU" in these lines is a general, non-specific "you," meaning anyone. Then in the subsequent lines, the "you" shifts to mean God. So what Bono is saying is that when your thoughts weigh heavy on your mind and you can't sleep because you feel like the weight of the world is on your shoulders, and all of these troubling thoughts and problems are taking their toll in negative ways (COSTING you -- "too expensive to keep"), then comfort yourself to know that God is there watching, and he never blinks or looks away.
    Flag Bluewaveson June 17, 2007   Link
  • 0
    General Comment:daedolos:

    peace!

    respect to you my friend
    Flag stormbonoon January 06, 2007   Link
  • 0
    General Comment:I just learned something new. Thanks, Nightvid.

    Peace

    BTW, I liked this song. FOR it's apparent pessimism, the effect of the song is a calming one.

    Peace
    Flag daedoloson November 27, 2006   Link
  • -1
    General Comment:Steve Stockham (the author of Walk On: The Spiritual Journey of U2) wrote that this is a song about God. However, that can't be true.

    If this is a song about God, then why does Bono say, "You don't even blink now do you?/ Or even look away"? We all know that God is always with us and that He's always watching what we do. Bono wouldn't ask God such senseless questions.

    Moreover, if this is a song about God, then why does Bono say, "When the night is someone else's/ And your trying to get some sleep . . ."? We all know that God doesn't crawl into bed and sleep at night. Again, Bono would not make such senseless statements.

    It's obvious that Bono's not singing to God, but to a human being--namely the Pope. Of course, you can interpret the song however you want. Stockham probably didn't like the Pope interpretation because he's not Catholic. However, Bono most likely did have the Pope in mind while writting the song, dispite how the individual might interpret it.
    Flag Nightvidon September 16, 2005   Link
  • -1
    General Comment:In the year 1999, Bono and Bob Geldof met with Pope John Paul II to discuss debt release for the world's poorest contries. During the meeting, the pope exchanged a rosary for a pair of Bono's fly sunglasses. You can still see Bono carrying (or sometimes wearing) this rosary today.
    Anyway. . .
    I have hear Bono imply that he wrote this song after meeting with the pope, and that the song is actually about the pope. The lyrics make much more sense when you interpret them this way.
    Consider the last verse, for example: "I'm in the waiting room/ Can't see for the smoke. . . " I think it's obvious that Bono's making a reference to purgatory. He's saying that although his faith in Christ has earned him salvation, he must first purge himself of his sins in order to become Christ-like and ready for heaven.
    Bono's basically asking the pope for help, and he's expressing his gratitude.
    Flag Nightvidon June 28, 2005   Link
  • -1
    General Comment:These are all interesting views - I especially like the idea that this was to his wife (who, in a way, is stronger than him).

    But I always thought (I have done no research) that this was Bono's view of Priests.

    With all the evil in the world, they always seem to stay positive and motivated to keep teaching their flock, while the rest of us who care can easily be disheartened by all the evil we see (poverty, AIDS, terrorism, tsunamis, etc.).

    I came up with that idea purely from the second-to-last stanza when he mentions the "holy book, when the rest of us choke."

    Very interested in others views of my conjecture?
    Flag X34brandonon December 30, 2004   Link

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