![]() ![]() It’s what makes “Vice” such a powerful song. It’s one of the greater spiritual challenges out there. Every human being in history has experienced this, at least on some level, whether she’ll admit it or not: the unending quest for solace in flawed fixes that will ultimately leave you empty-and then, after the fix wears off, heading back to the same failed well, even when you clearly know better. I run to things for comfort just like everybody else.” “Sometimes when you’re going through something in your life, you may run to some things you shouldn’t and run from some things you shouldn’t.” While the song isn’t straight autobiography, she adds, “There’s no mystery here. “Everybody has a vice of some sort,” Lambert told the paper. And so on, and so forth, forever and ever, amen. Underperform at a presidential forum? Matt Lauer clearly sabotaged you. Everything is always someone else’s fault. Refreshing, isn’t it? In the age of modern feminism, after all, it’s very much in vogue not to own any of your you-know-what, no matter how dysfunctional you may be. In writing “Vice,” as she recently told The Tennessean, she was simply “being honest” and “owning her sh*t.” Lambert has summed up the song, which was written during her divorce from fellow country star Blake Shelton-at the very time, she notes, when everything “hit the fan”-in fairly straightforward terms. ![]() Well the only thing that I know how to find Standing at the sink not looking at the mirror ![]()
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