Randy orton theme song old burn in my light lyrics
I still wake up every morning feeling as if every day is new but now I am more aware of it and still believe my dad did great things and I hope my children think the same when they get older hopefully with out all the bullshit that clouded it like Mark Everett TS Spivet and I had to endure.ĭuane and Sharon were preparing to go home, it had been a fun Schoolies week.
#RANDY ORTON THEME SONG OLD BURN IN MY LIGHT LYRICS FULL#
He lived a full and rewarding life and I believe my dad did too. I believe Michael Crichton received lots of cheques in the mail in his life but they are no use to him now because he died several years ago of cancer, same as my dad. These events led me to start writing again. I saw it as a good sign, on arriving home I found an envelope with a cheque in it, payment for a story I had submitted. I didn’t even know a new Eels album was due out and the man behind the counter said it had only arrived that morning. I have a clear recollection of the day I first time I heard the song because it was the day my divorce became final and on the way home from the courthouse I went into a record shop to buy something to cheer me up.
Mark Everett eventually found out his father did and wrote a wonderful song about it. I believe all parents’ love their children unconditionally, I know I do, others just have a very hard time showing it. TS Spivet realises his father loves him unconditionally – his love was expressed in actions rather than words. TS Spivet’s father meanwhile has driven half way across America to rescue TS and goes as far as storming into the Capitol Building to find his son. TS Spivet eventually gets to Washington and receives his award, he is however used by ambitious bureaucrats who try to hijack his fame. TS Spivet doesn’t disappear into the worm hole, he wakes up and finds himself in a huge rail switch yards in Chicago, coincidently where Michael Crichton was born, In his techno thriller novel Timeline Crichton uses the same theory to explain how people go back in history but not time because the move to dimensions that are infinitesimal different to our universe and thus people can come back with out disturbing current history. This theory was also the topic of one of my favourite authors Michael Crichton, himself a child prodigy who wrote for the New York Times at the age of 14. Coincidently Hugh Everett 111 a giant in the Quantum Physics field is Mark Everett’s father. When explaining the worm hole theory TS Spivets (who is probably one of the few 12 year olds in the world who could understand such a theory) refers to Hugh Everett 111 who first theorized about the Many Worlds concept which the worm holes refer to. This reminds him of an essay he discovered in a Library back home that explained worm holes existing in the American Midwest and were responsible for many disappearances during the ages. TS Spivet hitches a ride on a train and during the long trip he awakens to find himself in void that he can’t explain with no sound or sense of place. TS Spivet is very distant from his father and believes he does not understand or even love him very much because of his academic bent and runs away to Washington without telling his family to accept the award believing they wouldn’t let him or even believe he had won it. TS Spivit lives in Montana and is the product of Scientist Mother and a Cowboy Father. It is about a 12 year old prodigy who creates maps to explain all manner of things, both scientific and those of the everyday who wins an award from the Smithsonian Institute, who believe he is many years older.
It’s funny I chose to play this album on the long drive to work recently because I had just finished a book I picked up by chance in a bargain book barn titled The Selected works of TS Spivet Coincidently the song above explains how as he gets older Mark Everett is more acceptable of the person he has become and how he now understands the actions of his deceased father and forgives him for their strained relationship when he was younger.Ĭoincidently this is something that happened in my own life and I can relate to. Mr Everett (or E as he is commonly known) has this effect on me with a lot of the songs he writes.
I never knew how much I believed the sentiment expressed in those lines until I heard them, maybe I grasped the concept so long ago that I needed it sung to me for it to come to my realisation. The above are lines from one of my favourite songs by songwriter Mark Everett from the Eels. Is it a coincidence I believe in synchronicity?