When this song was released, Sophie B. Hawkins told Q it was about "love and death, someone close to me who died earlier this year." The line, "I miss you making love to me right" is a good clue as to what kind of relationship she had with this person, but as we found out when we asker about the inspiration for her first hit, "Damn, I Wish I Was Your Lover," Hawkins sees these songs as existing on another plane. "The love affair's still going on," she told Q. "It feels like there's no distance between us. I just talk to myself and they're there. Love and death, they're the big things that scare you though, aren't they?"
Hawkins wrote this with the songwriter/producers Stewart Lerman and Rick Chertoff. It was produced by Steve Lipson.
This was the first single from Hawkins' second album, Whaler. When it stalled at #56, it seemed like the album had been harpooned. The second single, "Don't Don't Tell Me No," didn't make the chart, but then the third one, a slow-moving lullaby-like song called "As I Lay Me Down," found an audience and rose to #6 a year after the album was released.
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