“Some of you out there has made some decisions recently to leave somebody that you love, thought loved you, thinks still loves you, and you still canât find a way to work it out. And if you done it three days ago then youâre still on the straight and now. But if you done it three weeks ago itâs getting tough. Itâs getting tough to hold on âcause those dreams are coming in, yeah. Things happen you want to tell the other person about, you know what Iâm talking about? Yeah, then you start getting the dreams where theyâre cool. You wake up like âOh, I think theyâre actually cool.â Nah, thatâs just dreams messing with you, all right. So, a lot of people here are trying to stick to their guns. But now itâs getting harder and harder not to write back. âCause when you resist, they persist. Thatâs just how it goes, right? But Iâm here to tell you that you are not psychotic. You are not crazy, youâre just lonely, and loneliness is a hell of a drug. Loneliness is a hell of a drug. So Iâm here to take over your brain for a moment if thatâs how you actually feel and remind you; do not have contact. Do not have contact, I donât care how lonely you get. Loneliness is part of it, right? Youâll be lonely, but I know youâll be OK. Youâll be lonely, but I know youâll be okey, âcause good love is on the way. So when that Blackberry goes off, or that iPhone goes âbrrrfff brrrfffâ and it is who you think it is; turn it over and go back to bed, and sing yourself a little lullaby. ”
— John Mayer, Perfectly Lonely, Noblesville, 2010.