Spadam by Coma Lyrics Meaning – The Fall into Light and Shadow Beyond Existence
Lyrics
powoli spadam
w korytarze świateł
w pomruki znaczeń
spadam
jakby nie było
całego świata
jak by nie było nawet mnie
spadam
pomiędzy zdania
w niedorzeczności
bez wahania
spadam
chroni mnie wiara
niech będzie chwała Bogu
a w mojej duszy spokój
spadam
co się wyprawia?
cały w spadaniu
cały ze światła
spadam
jaka zabawa
jaki tu spokój
równowaga
spadam
nie czuję ciała
i tylko błagam
o łaskę trwania jeszcze
spadam zostaniesz sama
a może to mój chory sen?
a może śmierć?
a może nie ma
nie, nie ma
może nie ma mnie?
nie, nie, nie…
sen?
a może śmierć?
a może nie ma…
The Polish rock band Coma, known for melding poetic introspection with hard-hitting sonics, has often probed the depth of the human psyche through their music. ‘Spadam’, a track from their repertoire, is no outlier in this pursuit. As listeners, we are invited into a spiraling descent—a skimming through corridors of illumination and murmurs of meanings that beguile as much as they reveal.
On the surface, ‘Spadam’, which translates to ‘I’m Falling’, could be written off as another ode to the inescapable pull of gravity, but beneath its lyrics lie layers of existential contemplation strung together with an almost effortless rhyme, inviting us to plunge into the metaphysical spaces between light and shadow, presence and absence, being and nothingness.
Descending into the Labyrinth of Light
The opening lines of ‘Spadam’ set a scene of gentle descent, ‘w korytarze świateł’ (‘into the corridors of lights’), suggesting an otherworldly journey that the protagonist is undergoing. With such imagery, we’re steered towards an interpretation that transcends the literal, possibly nudging us towards the enlightenment that often comes with close encounters with our inner realms. It’s a poetic leap through levels of existence, as ‘lights’ may stand for consciousness, understanding, or stages of life itself.
Cascading Between the Lines—Finding Sanctuary in Absurdity
‘Pomiędzy zdania’ (‘between the sentences’), Coma’s lyrics dive into the comfort of non-sense. There is a liberation in admitting the chaos, finding solace in the whitespace between thoughts, between the rational chains that hold together our daily lives. To fall ‘w niedorzeczności’ (‘into nonsense’) might seem reckless, yet the lines evoke a deliberate release, an embrace of the irrational as a form of protective faith.
The Sublime Equilibrium of Freefall – Peace Amidst Chaos
The duality presented in ‘Spadam’ is vivid. ‘Jaka zabawa / jaki tu spokój / równowaga’ (‘What a play / such peace here / balance’) tip-toes around the irony of finding tranquility amidst a plummet. As we tumble through Coma’s verses, we’re enticed to consider whether true peace is found, paradoxically, in constant motion and change, where stability is not in stasis but in the eternal fall.
The Haunting Echoes of Existential Dread – A Brush with Nonexistence?
‘A może to mój chory sen? / A może śmierć? / A może nie ma / nie, nie ma / może nie ma mnie?’ (‘Or maybe it’s my sick dream? / Or maybe death? / Or maybe there is no / no, there is no / maybe there is no me?’) The song brings us face-to-face with the abyss, where the thought of non-existence lingers. ‘Spadam’ drapes this realization with the allure of a lullaby, coaxing us to confront the most human of fears—oblivion—while swathed in the suave fabric of melody.
Leaving behind More than just a Song – The Aftertaste of ‘Spadam’
‘Spadam’ is not merely a collection of lines set to a tune; it’s an encounter with the fragility of our own existence. The lyrics urge us to weigh our sense of being against the vast backdrop of potential nothingness. By the song’s end, we’re left not just with a melody lingering in our ears, but with questions clinging to our minds. Are we just free-falling through the absurdity of life, or is there meaning in the gentle drift into the unknown?





