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About the Song

Written in 2024,

“We’re All in Trouble” exposes how easily we judge people based on appearances while ignoring the hidden battles they carry.
The song reveals that everyone hides something — pain, secrets, doubts — and that our certainty about others is nothing but illusion.
It’s a reminder to look deeper, stop labeling, and recognize that behind every face is a story we don’t know.

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We're all in trouble

We're all in trouble ​ - lyrics

We like to think we’ve got it all figured out
The world’s a simple place, there’s no room for doubt
We put people in boxes, it’s just what we do
We judge by appearance, it’s our point of view
We see a pretty face, we think they’re pure
But little do we know, they might not be so sure
We wave to the neighbor, with his handsome grin
But behind closed doors, he’s hiding his sin

Yeah, we judge people by the way they look
But that’s just a cover, you can’t judge a book
We feel safe, in our little bubble
But the truth is, we’re all in trouble

We see a young girl, we think she’s naive
But she’s got a story, you wouldn’t believe
We see an old man, we think he’s wise
But he’s got secrets, behind those tired eyes
We like to think we know people well
But the truth is, it’s just a facade we sell We’re all just actors, playing a part
Hiding our true selves, deep in our heart

Yeah, we judge people by the way they look
But that’s just a cover, you can’t judge a book
We feel safe, in our little bubble
But the truth is, we’re all in trouble

Geeks with their glasses, always lost in a book
We think they’re just nerds, we don’t give a second look
Geeks with their glasses, always lost in a book
We think they’re just nerds, we don’t give a second look

Yeah, we judge people by the way they look But that’s just a cover, you can’t judge a book
We feel safe, in our little bubble
But the truth is, we’re all in trouble

So let’s stop judging people by what we see
Let’s dig a little deeper, let’s let them be

So let’s stop judging people by what we see Let’s dig a little deeper, let’s let them be

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“We’re All in Trouble”

1. Core Theme — The Illusion of Knowing People

The heart of the song is this simple truth:
we don’t know anyone as well as we think we do.

Humans judge fast, shallowly, and confidently — and we’re usually wrong.
The “trouble” isn’t that people are bad…
It’s that we think we understand them based on surface impressions.

This creates a society built on illusions, misjudgments, and false security.


2. Verse 1 — The Comfort of Stereotypes

“We put people in boxes, it’s just what we do.”

The first verse exposes how society automatically categorizes:
pretty = pure
handsome = good
familiar = safe
Different = dangerous

But these labels are lies we tell ourselves to simplify a complex world.

The neighbor with the handsome smile might be hiding darkness.
The pretty face might be filled with uncertainty.

The verse shows how appearances are deceptive — and comforting.
We use them to create a sense of order, even when it’s false.


3. The Chorus — The Collapse of the Illusion

“We feel safe in our little bubble
but the truth is, we’re all in trouble.”

The chorus is the awakening.
We hide in emotional bubbles —
thinking we know who’s good, who’s bad, who’s safe, who’s simple.

But the real danger isn’t the world outside.
It’s our blindness.
Our confidence in shallow judgments.
Our refusal to see reality.

The “trouble” is collective misunderstanding — a broken compass.


4. Verse 2 — Hidden Stories, Hidden Wounds

“We see a young girl, we think she’s naive…
we see an old man, we think he’s wise.”

This verse demolishes classic societal assumptions.
Youth ≠ innocence
Age ≠ wisdom
Appearance ≠ truth

The young girl “has a story you wouldn’t believe.”
The old man “has secrets behind those tired eyes.”

The message:
Everyone carries invisible scars.
Everyone battles something.
Everyone hides.

The verse ends with a heavy line:

“We’re all just actors, playing a part.”
This is sociological truth:
people hide their failures, fears, traumas — and pretend.


5. The Bridge — Stereotypes Made Visible

“Geeks with their glasses… we think they’re just nerds.”

This bridge is intentionally repetitive — like a chant of prejudice.
It shows how lazy judgments are passed down unconsciously.

The repetition is the point:
It mirrors how society repeats stereotypes without thinking.

It’s almost mocking:
“You didn’t even look twice, did you?”


6. Final Verse — The Call for Depth

“So let’s stop judging people by what we see.”

After exposing all illusions, the final verse is the call to action.
It doesn’t demand love or trust — just depth.
Just a willingness to look beyond the mask.

This is NoPiPy’s philosophical layer:
don’t assume you know someone.
Don’t mistake their face for their truth.

Understanding begins where appearances end.

 

The songs of Nopipy are expressions of freedom of speech and social justice, explicitly rejecting any form of violence.