Views : 22,318,527
Genre: Music
Date of upload: Jan 8, 2017 ^^
Rating : 4.954 (5,549/472,182 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2022-04-09T21:23:39.751656Z
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Top Comments of this video!! :3
The “necklace” is a metaphor. It represents all the rules she had to follow for her parents attention and the older she got the more rules like when she says “do not be angry”, “do not go away”,” be right here” it’s probably some of the rules she had to follow and she developed golden child syndrome, so she started to think she has to follow the rules to get attention from others.
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Aishite" is an original song by Kikuo. This song is about a girl who demands love and attention from other people as an effect of a cursed collar she wears. As she grows up, the collar's effect on her becomes stronger, making her end up feeling unsatisfied and continues to demand more love and attention from others, believing that the people whom she demands from are not enough. Another interpretation is that it is about a girl who wants love from her parents. Her parents want her to do well in school and do not give her the love she so desires. The collar she wears is a symbol of her parents' expectations. As she grows up and her body changes, the collar stays the same size just as what her parents want out of her doesn't change either. This song entered the Hall of Legend on November 24, 2019. On October 4, 2021 Kikuo announced on their YouTube channel that the song surpassed 1 million likes, taking the top spot numerically on both YouTube and Spotify.
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Just as a personal perspective: the necklace is the expectations her parents had of her. It started off easy to achieve, but it wound tighter and tighter as the achievements became harder and harder to reach.
Necklaces can be taken off and on as you please. Her parents gave her the necklace, and she put it on. She held onto it, even when it hurt her, because she didn’t want to seem ungrateful to her parents.
I’m still wearing my necklace.
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(TRIGGER WARNING)
This is one of the songs I relate to the most, and it’s pretty rare to find a song I see myself in. I have loving and caring parents, but it’s the attention seeking part I relate to. As a person who struggles with Histrionic Personality Disorder (HPD), I uncontrollably do extreme things for attention even to the point of hurting myself. Don’t reply worrying about me because I already have a therapist and a psychiatrist I see frequently. HPD has always been a part of my life and it’s made it difficult to make friends and keep those friendships from falling apart.
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@Pr1ncessOlive
3 years ago
Instead of saying “Ashite” I said ashit.
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