

To quote that line is an interesting choice, since in context it comes in response to bad-faith instigators who are trying to trap Jesus in his words. Later in the song, he uses an allusion to Jesus, who delivered the line “Give to Caesar what is Caesar's” in the Book of Matthew. But in my opinion, you have it all when you have the truth.” RM finds guidance in Yun, who fought for justice and truth in art and life.

It’s the sincerity in truth, the moral goodness, and the beauty. At the beginning of the song, Yun narrates: “According to Plato’s humanity, it’s the human essence to seek truth, goodness, and beauty. How do you know what to reject? The song is named after the late painter Yun Hyongkeun, whose painting is the Indigo album cover. sadness, and how you can grow both despite and because of the advice you get from others. In “Yun,” with Badu, he explores human vs. (Fittingly, it’s done with Tablo of Epik High, one of the first inspirations for RM’s rap dreams as a teen.) He looks back even as he looks forward. “All Day,” describes a battle between the body and the mind, between a soulless algorithm and a search for something more true or pure. 2,” in conversation with his 2017 track with Wale about injustice, hope, and legacy. Those contradictions are everywhere on Indigo: the aforementioned “Lonely,” and the corrosive synth frustration on “Change pt. There were a lot of contradictions, people, fame, and conflict all tangled together, but it was my choice and I got a lot out of it, so my twenties were an intense but also happy time.” But now I feel like I don’t know anything at all.” He sums it up like this: “My young, reckless twenties. I thought I figured them out one by one, and then finally understood the whole thing. In 2020, he told Weverse Magazine, “Looking back, there were a lot of ironies and contradictions in this industry. “I want to enjoy the tides of feeling in me as the rhythms of life.” There’s a desire to coexist with uncertainty in RM’s work as well. “Happiness and unhappiness alternate throughout life, as in a dance,” Baek writes, translated by Anton Hur. That love and hate can feel something like the same, sometimes. She relearns the same lessons over and over again: that her ability to receive love is impacted by how she sees herself, that nothing is ever black and white. The author often fails to do so, drawing up protective armor and comparing herself to those around her obsessively. The book is a plaintive journey through mild depression, questions of self-esteem, and what it means to love yourself. In an episode of Bon Voyage season 3, a reality show where the BTS members travel to different countries together (season 3 was in Malta), fans spotted the therapy memoir I Want to Die But I Want to Eat Tteokbokki by Baek Sehee on RM’s bedside table.
