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  • That Power
  • Childish Gambino
  • CAMP


  • That Power - Childish Gambino
  • All these haters

  • See you later

  • All that I could do
  • But you dont even feel me though
  • I know you know I know you got that power

  • That power

  • Oh, oh oh

  • So CG but a nigga stay real
  • Though I'm fly I'm ill I'm running shit
  • 3-points, field goal
  • Rappers used to laugh like I tripped and fell
  • Cause I don't stunt a gold cross like I Christian bail
  • Yeah, they starin' at me jealous cause I do shows bigger
  • But your looks don't help, like an old gold digger
  • Uncool, but lyrically I'm a stone cold killer
  • So it's 400 blows to these Truffaut niggas

  • Yeah, now that's the line of the century
  • Niggas missed it, too busy
  • They lyin' 'bout penitentiary
  • Man, you ain't been there
  • Nigga you been scared
  • And I'm still living single like Synclaire
  • Lovin' white dudes who call me white and then try to hate
  • When I wasn't white enough to use your pool when I was 8
  • Stone Mountain you raised me well
  • I'm stared at by Confederates but hard as hell
  • Tight jeans penny loafers, but I still drink a Bodine
  • Staying on my me shit, but hated on by both sides
  • I'm just a kid who blowing up with my father's name
  • And every black "you're not black enough"
  • Is a white "you're all the same"
  • Mm Food like Rapp Snitch Knishes
  • Cuz its oreos, twinkies, coconuts, delicious

  • How many gold plaques you want inside your dining room?
  • I said I want a full house
  • They said, "You got it dude!"

  • All these haters

  • See you later

  • All that I could do

  • But you dont even feel me though
  • I know you know I know you got that power

  • That power

  • Oh, oh oh
  • Holla, holla, holla, holla at yo boy
  • Like yo dad when he's pissed off
  • Got flow, I could make a cripple crip walk
  • Niggas' breath stank, all they do is shit talk
  • People want a real man, I made 'em wait this long
  • Maybe if he bombs, he'll quit and keep actin'[!--empirenews.page--]
  • And save paper like your aunt does with McDonald napkins
  • How'd it happen? Honesty did it
  • See all of my competition at the bodies exhibit
  • Yeah I bodied the limits and I get at them fakers
  • Motherfuck if you hate it, cremated them haters
  • So, my studio be a funeral
  • Yeah, this is our year, oh you didn't know?
  • Uh, yeah I'm killin' you, step inside the lion's den
  • Man I'm hov if the 'O' was an 'I' instead
  • On stage with my family in front of me
  • I am what I am: everything I wanna be

  • All these haters

  • See you later

  • All that I could do

  • But you dont even feel me though
  • I know you know I know you got that power

  • That power

  • This is on a bus back from camp.

  • I'm thirteen and so are you.

  • Before I left for camp I imagined it would be me and three or four other dudes I hadn't met yet, running around all summer,
  • getting into trouble.

  • It turned out it would be me and just one girl.

  • That's you.

  • And we're still at camp
  • as long as we're on the bus
  • and not at the pickup point
  • where our parents would be waiting for us.

  • We're still wearing our orange camp t-shirts.

  • We still smell like pineneedles.

  • I like you and you like me and I more-than-like you,
  • but I don't know if you do or don't more-than-like me.
  • You've never said, so I haven't been saying anything all summer,
  • content to enjoy the small miracle of a girl
  • choosing to talk to me and choosing to do so again
  • the next day and so on.

  • A girl who's smart and funny and who,
  • if I say something dumb for a laugh,
  • is willing to say something two or three times
  • as dumb to make me laugh,

  • but who also gets weird and wise sometimes in a way I could never be.
  • A girl who reads books that no one's assigned to her,
  • whose curly brown hair has a line running through it from

  • where she put a tie to hold it up while it was still wet

  • Back in the real world we don't go to the same school,

  • and unless one of our families moves to a dramatically different neighborhood,
  • we won't go to the same high school.[!--empirenews.page--]

  • So, this is kind of it for us. Unless I say something.

  • And it might especially be it for us if I actually do say something.

  • The sun's gone down and the bus is quiet.

  • A lot of kids are asleep.

  • We're talking in whispers about a tree we saw at a rest stop that looks like a kid we know.

  • And then I'm like, "Can I tell you something?"

  • And all of a sudden I'm telling you.
  • And I keep telling you and it all comes out of me
  • and it keeps coming and your face is there and gone
  • and there and gone as we pass underneath the orange lamps
  • that line the sides of the highway.

  • And there's no expression on it.

  • And I think just after a point
  • I'm just talking to lengthen the time
  • where we live in a world where you haven't said "yes" or "no" yet.
  • And regrettably I end up using the word "destiny." I
  • don't remember in what context.

  • Doesn't really matter.

  • Before long I'm out of stuff to say

  • and you smile and say, "okay."

  • I don't know exactly what you mean by it,
  • but it seems vaguely positive and I would leave in order not to spoil the moment,
  • but there's nowhere to go because we're are on a bus.
  • So I pretend like I'm asleep and before long, I really am

  • I wake up, the bus isn't moving anymore.

  • The domed lights that line the center aisle are all on.
  • I turn and you're not there.

  • Then again a lot of kids aren't in their seats anymore.

  • We're parked at the pick-up point,
  • which is in the parking lot of a Methodist church.

  • The bus is half empty.
  • You might be in your dad's car by now,
  • your bags and things piled high in the trunk.

  • The girls in the back of the bus are shrieking
  • and laughing and taking their sweet time disembarking
  • as I swing my legs out into the aisle to get up off the bus,
  • just as one of them reaches my row.

  • It used to be our row, on our way off.
  • It's Michelle,
  • a girl who got suspended from third grade for a week
  • after throwing rocks at my head.

  • Adolescence is doing her a ton of favors body-wise.

  • [!--empirenews.page--]
  • She stops and looks down at me.

  • And her head is blasted from behind by the dome light,
  • so I can't really see her face, but I can see her smile.

  • And she says one word: "destiny."

  • Then her and the girls clogging the aisles behind her
  • all laugh and then she turns and leads them off the bus.

  • I didn't know you were friends with them

  • I find my dad in the parking lot.

  • He drives me back to our house and camp is over.

  • So is summer, even though there's two weeks until school starts.

  • This isn't a story about how girls are evil or how love is bad,

  • this is a story about how I learned something
  • and I'm not saying this thing is true or not,
  • I'm just saying it's what I learned.

  • I told you something.

  • It was just for you and you told everybody.

  • So I learned cut out the middle man,
  • make it all for everybody, always.
  • Everybody can't turn around and tell everybody,
  • everybody already knows, I told them.
  • But this means there isn't a place in my life for you or someone like you
  • . Is it sad? Sure. But it's a sadness I chose.

  • I wish I could say this was a story about how I got on the bus a boy and got off a man more cynical, hardened, and mature and shit.
  • But that's not true.

  • The truth is I got on bus a the boy. And I never got off the bus.
  • I still haven't.