Lyrics
Fall, stay
Call, wait
Know, how to say
Believe, everything is okay
I need it more
I need it more
I need it more, than you
Love or in vain
Your pedals are gone
Your habits astray
I need it more
I need it more
I need it more, than you
I coming around
I’ll have to make do
Of your sea glass
I need it more
We dont have to keep the score
My creed will speak for
Me and you
Story Behind the Song
“Sea Glass” is a metaphor for perception—specifically, the difference between how someone appears on the surface and how they reveal themselves when you try to understand them more deeply.
At first glance, there’s beauty, color, and something almost effortless about what you see. Like sea glass washed up on the shore, it catches the light in a way that feels complete on its own. But as you get closer, that clarity starts to shift. What looked simple becomes harder to define, harder to fully read. You realize you’re not looking at something fixed—you’re looking at something shaped by time, movement, and experience.
The song sits in that tension between attraction and uncertainty. The desire to know someone more fully runs into the reality that people aren’t always transparent or easy to interpret. What you thought was clear starts to blur, not because it’s false, but because depth complicates the surface.
At the heart of the song, the repeated “I need it more” chorus becomes a turning point. What begins as emotional longing gradually transforms into a realization: that need doesn’t always have to be directed outward. It can become a decision to choose yourself instead—to step back from confusion and imbalance, and return to your own clarity, boundaries, and sense of self.
Rather than resolving everything about the other person, “Sea Glass” resolves something within you. It stays inside that mystery of perception and connection, but ultimately shifts toward self-definition—learning when to let go of trying to understand everything outside of you, and instead choosing what keeps you grounded.
