Of course. "So High" is a very popular song title. The most prominent version in the current pop landscape, and one rich for analysis, is the ethereal R&B track by Doja Cat from her landmark 2021 album, Planet Her.
Here are the complete lyrics to Doja Cat’s "So High," followed by a 1000-word analysis of its thes, production, and cultural significance.
"So High" - Lyrics by Doja Cat
[Intro] Faded, faded, faded Yeah
[Verse 1] I’m so high, I’m so high, I’m so high You get so high, I’m so high, I’m so high Got strung out, strung out, strung out, strung out, strung out Need you, I’m addicted You’re my dication Got in the sky Got seein’ stars Got seein’ white lines Got in the sky And I need you to get by I can’t even lie Lie, lie, lie
[Pre-Chorus] I don’t need no pills, I don’t need no high When you’re in my arms, you’re my dication I don’t need no kiss, I don’t need no paradise I just need your arms, I don’t need a vacation Fantasy, ecstasy, lodies All of this is what you do to Fantasy, ecstasy, lodies All of this is what you do to
[Chorus] ’Cause you get so high You get so high You get so high You get so high
[Verse 2] Your love is a drug, a drug, a drug, a drug Got in a haze, a haze, a haze, a haze I give you my trust, my trust, can I? I give you my trust, my trust, can I? (Yeah) Got in a rush, a rush, a rush, a rush Got so obsessed, obsessed, obsessed, obsessed (Yeah) Boy, I must confess, confess, confess I’m a fuckin’ ss, a ss, a ss
[Pre-Chorus] I don’t need no pills, I don’t need no high When you’re in my arms, you’re my dication I don’t need no kiss, I don’t need no paradise I just need your arms, I don’t need a vacation Fantasy, ecstasy, lodies All of this is what you do to Fantasy, ecstasy, lodies All of this is what you do to
[Chorus] ’Cause you get so high You get so high You get so high You get so high (Faded, faded, faded, faded)
[Outro] Can I get a hit of your love? Can I get a hit? Got so strung out, got so strung out Strung out, strung out, strung out (Faded, faded, faded) Can I get a hit of your love? Can I get a hit? (Faded, faded, faded) Got so strung out, got so strung out Strung out, strung out, strung out (Faded, faded, faded) (Faded, faded, faded) (Faded, faded, faded)
The Siren Song of Addiction: A 1000-Word Analysis of Doja Cat’s "So High"
In the vast, glittering, and often bizarre solar system of Doja Cat’s artistry, "So High" represents a key territory: a planet of pure, unfiltered sensuality. Looking back from our vantage point in October 2025, the Planet Her album (2021) was a cultural juggernaut that solidified her status as a global superstar. While singles like "Kiss More" and "Woman" showcased her mastery of radio-friendly pop and Afrobeats-infused R&B, "So High" served a different, crucial purpose. It’s a throwback to her SoundCloud origins, a hazy, atmospheric "cloud R&B" track that explores the well-worn pop trope of love-as-a-drug, but does so with a hypnotic, almost narcotic sincerity that makes it one of the most imrsive songs in her catalog. "So High" is not a song about love; it’s a song about the feeling of infatuation, an intoxicating portrait of blissful, dangerous dependency.
Lyrical Deconstruction: The Pharmacology of Infatuation
The central taphor of "So High" is established imdiately and relentlessly: this love is a substance, a chemical, a high that has overtaken the narrator’s entire being. The song is not a narrative; it’s a state of being. The lyrics function as a series of confessions from inside this altered state. She repeats "I’m so high" not as a boast, but as a simple statent of fact, a diagnosis. The repetition of "strung out" in the first verse is telling. This isn’t just a fun, recreational high; it’s the language of addiction, implying a loss of control and a desperate, physical need.
This is where the song gains its edge. Doja Cat explicitly identifies her lover as her "dication." This refras the relationship as a form of self-dication, a dependency that replaces other substances. The pre-chorus is a litany of these replacents: "I don’t need no pills," "I don’t need no paradise," "I don’t need a vacation." The lover has beco her sole source of escapism and relief. The tri-colon of "Fantasy, ecstasy, lodies" is a perfect summary of the experience—it’s unreal, it’s physically pleasurable, and it’s beautiful, all embodied in a single person.
The second verse delves deeper into the vulnerability this dependency creates. "Your love is a drug," she repeats, before confessing she’s "in a haze" and "a fuckin’ ss." The most critical line in the entire song is the mont of clarity that breaks through the haze: "I give you my trust, my trust, can I?" This sudden, anxious question is a flicker of paranoia, a mont of self-awareness. It’s the voice of the addict wondering if their dealer is lacing the supply. Is this high safe? Is this person worthy of this complete and total surrender? The song doesn’t answer the question. Instead, it imdiately plunges back into the feeling—"Got in a rush, a rush, a rush / Got so obsessed." The anxiety is imdiately overwheld by the craving. The outro, with its desperate, breathy pleas—"Can I get a hit of your love?"—confirms that even if the trust is questionable, the addiction is absolute.
Sonic Architecture: The Sound of the Haze
The production of "So High" is a masterclass in atmospheric R&B. The track, which Doja Cat co-produced, is the perfect sonic embodint of the lyrics. It sounds like the "haze" she describes. The entire song is built on a foundation of woozy, ethereal synthesizer pads that float in the background like smoke.e.
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