Lyrics Did I Ever Wake Up?, Pt. 4 - MOD SUN
After
high
school
I
dove
head-first
into
the
touring
Rock
band
circuit
with
my
band,
The
Semester.
Throughout
school
I
never
had
any
intentions
to
attend
college.
All
I
wanted
to
do
was
get
on
a
stage
and
travel
the
world.
The
band
I
was
in
was
going
to
make
it
to
the
top.
I
was
with
my
best
friends,
and
nothing
could
hold
us
back.
That
is,
until
I
got
kicked
out
of
the
band.
One
phone
call
is
all
it
took
to
completely
flip
my
entire
world
upside
down.
I
was
crushed.
This
band
was
everything
to
me
and
I
had
no
idea
what
I
was
going
to
do
next.
Little
did
I
know,
this
was
a
stepping
stone
to
greater
achievements.
Around
the
same
time,
another
band
in
town
called
Four
Letter
Lie
was
looking
for
a
new
drummer.
I
joined
the
band
and
within
a
matter
of
months,
we
were
signed
by
Victory
Records
and
were
touring
full
time
with
bands
like
Captain
Heavy
rotation
on
my
stereo.
After
a
couple
of
really
great
years
with
Four
Letter
Lie,
I
felt
it
was
time
to
enter
the
next
step
of
my
musical
expedition.
I
wanted
to
be
speaking
with
more
than
my
hands
and
feet,
so
I
decided
to
step
to
the
front
of
the
stage
and
let
my
voice
and
ideas
be
heard.
Four
Letter
Lie
was
doing
very
well,
but
I
knew
deep
down
I
wanted
something
else.
I
had
to
leave
a
state
of
comfort
for
what
I
believed
in,
and
that's
what
my
new
music
was
going
to
represent.
The
very
next
day
I
started
MOD
SUN.
The
name
MOD
SUN
is
an
acronym
for
Movement
On
Dreams,
Stand
Under
None.
I
was
going
to
make
empowering
music
about
positively
and
happiness.
I
was
now
a
front
man
holding
the
microphone
and
writing
the
lyrics.
I
was
no
longer
Derek
Smith
per
se,
I
was
now
MOD
SUN.
In
the
summer
of
2009
my
good
friends
Scary
Kids
Scaring
Kids
came
to
town
as
part
of
Vans
Warped
Tour.
I
went
to
the
festival
and
witnessed
them
putting
on
an
amazing
show
in
front
of
thousands
of
fans
screaming
out
every
lyric.
I
was
blown
away
at
how
adoring
their
supporters
were.
Afterwards,
in
their
bus
singer
Tyson
Stevens
asked
me:
"
Do
you
have
a
job
right
now?"
I
replied
with
a
huge
grin
on
my
face.
"
Well,
not
exactly".
He
said,
"why
don't
you
come
on
the
rest
of
this
tour
with
us?"
Now,
keep
in
mind
at
this
point
I
had
just
begun
working
on
my
new
music
as
MOD
SUN
and
knew
I
needed
to
focus
on
it
and
start
to
build.
But,
I
had
also
just
watched
the
movie
Yes
Man
a
few
days
earlier.
I
loved
the
movie
so
much,
I
vowed
to
say
yes
to
every
opportunity
for
a
month
straight.
So,
true
to
my
word,
I
looked
my
friend
Tyson
right
in
the
eyes
and
said;
"
Let's
go!"
I
literally
jumped
on
the
bus
right
then
and
there
with
no
luggage
and
headed
to
the
next
city.
This
decision
would
prove
to
be
an
extremely
significant
turning
point
in
my
life.
The
first
concert
I
ever
attended
was
Vans
Warped
Tour
2001
with
Blink182,
Newfound
Glory,
Sum
41,
Alkaline
Trio,
Alien
Antfarm,
and
many
more.
The
moment
I
crossed
those
front
gates
and
entered
this
micro
world
of
creativity
and
individuality,
I
knew
what
I
wanted
to
do.
I
looked
at
that
stage
and
decided:
no
matter
what
it
takes,
I
would
be
up
there
some
day.
Now,
here
I
was
travelling
along
with
the
festival.
That
first
night
on
the
bus,
I
played
the
very
first
songs
I
recorded
as
Mod
Sun
to
the
Scary
Kids
Scaring
Kids
guys.
And
they
loved
them.
I
was
so
enthused
just
to
hear
opinions,
but
the
fact
they
were
so
positive
about
my
own
music
really
blew
me
away.
Every
day
the
band
would
do
a
meet
and
greet
with
hundreds
of
kids
and
they
immediately
mentioned
the
possibility
of
me
rapping
to
these
people
in
line
waiting
to
get
an
autograph.
The
guys
pulled
a
few
strings
and
before
you
knew
it,
I
was
doing
my
very
first
performances
as
Mod
Sun,
on
the
one
tour
I
had
always
dreamed
of
being
on.
Of
course,
this
wasn't
an
official
set,
but
it
was
definitely
as
step
in
the
right
direction
and
I
knew
I'd
be
there
soon
enough.
I
finished
up
the
rest
of
the
summer
with
them
on
the
festival
making
nothing
but
memories.
I
formed
many
great
friendships
and
even
reignited
the
friendship
between
Pat
Brown
and
myself.
We
had
somewhat
of
a
falling
out
after
I
was
kicked
out
of
The
Semester.
He
was
now
on
tour
with
his
new
band
called
Sing
It
Loud
and
doing
very
well.
Not
long
after
Warped
Tour
ended,
the
boys
in
Scary
Kids
Scaring
Kids
contacted
me
with
one
more
opportunity.
They
needed
a
drummer
to
play
for
them
on
their
2 final
tours.
The
first
was
a
65
day
tour
hitting
every
major
city
in
North
America.
The
second
was
a
30
day
tour
in
Australia
and
New
Zealand.
I
agreed
on
one
condition:
That
I
got
to
open
up
each
show
as
Mod
Sun.
They
agreed
and
within
a
matter
of
weeks
I
re
entered
the
touring
circuit,
but
this
time
as
a
solo
artist
playing
sold
out
shows
around
the
world.
From
this
point
on,
my
career
would
continue
to
grow
and
eventually
blossom
into
what
I
am
today.
If
my
world
hadn't
been
flipped
into
utter
chaos
so
many
years
back,
I
wouldn't
be
here.
Every
struggle
leads
to
greatness.
There's
no
such
thing
as
hard.
Chapter
7-
Your
Best
Mistake:
Wake
up
a
student,
go
to
sleep
a
teacher
One
of
my
favourite
stories
in
history
involves
the
legendary
inventor
Thomas
Edison.
We're
all
familiar
with
the
name,
but
not
many
people
know
just
how
inspirational
his
life
was.
Around
the
age
of
12,
young
Thomas
noticed
his
hearing
was
deteriorating.
Soon
he
would
eventually
go
deaf.
Instead
of
letting
such
a
drastic
change
affect
him
in
a
negative
way,
he
considered
it
to
be
an
asset.
It
allowed
him,
he
said,
to
work
with
less
distraction
and
to
sleep
deeply
at
night,
un
disturbed
by
outside
sounds.
How's
that
for
a
bright
side,
right?
One
major
misconception
is
that
Thomas
Edison
invented
the
light
bulb.
What
Edison
actually
invented
was
the
long
lasting
lightbulb.
The
original
lightbulb
was
very
impractical.
It
wasn't
bright
enough,
and
would
burn
out
daily.
Edison
had
a
passion
to
fix
that.
For
years,
he
made
many
attempts
at
finding
a
solution
for
the
bulb,
but
just
couldn't
figure
it
out.
A
majority
of
these
attempts
were
highly
publicised,
and
people
began
losing
faith
in
his
ability
to
solve
the
problem.
During
an
interview,
Edison
was
asked
if
he
felt
like
a
failure.
"
Young
man,"
he
replied,
"why
would
I
feel
like
a
failure?
And
why
would
I
ever
give
up?
I
know
now
definitively
over
9000
ways
that
an
electric
lightbulb
will
not
work.
Success
is
almost
in
my
grasp."
Eventually,
on
his
10,
000th
attempt,
Edison
invented
one
of
the
most
vital
objects
in
our
world.
Every
slip
up,
malfunction,
or
accident
he
made
was
used
as
a
valuable
piece
of
knowledge.
Your
worst
mistake
is
your
best
advice.
The
more
mistakes
you
make
only
means
the
more
guidance
you
have
to
offer.
You
should
embrace
this
mishaps
with
an
understanding
that
you
are
learning
from
them.
You
now
know
how
not
to
do
something,
and
that
is
just
as
valuable
as
knowing
how
to
do
something.
This
is
where
rout
universal
IQ
begins
to
rise.
Intelligence
isn't
intended
to
be
personal
acclimation.
It's
meant
to
be
shared.
We
all
enter
this
world
as
a
blank
page.
Throughout
our
lives
we
fill
our
pages
with
information
that
we
find
personally
stimulating.
Knowing
something
someone
else
doesn't
know
will
not
make
you
more
intelligent
than
the
next
person.
This
only
means
you've
been
asked
a
question
the
other
person
hasn't
yet
encountered.
The
first
time
we
hear
about
anything,
we
know
nothing
about
it.
Therefore,
no
one
is
superior
to
anyone
else,
but
we
can
all
learn
from
each
other.
If
you're
not
trying
to
teach,
you
haven't
learned
a
thing.
In
a
song
of
mine
called
Hug
Life,
I
wrote:
"you
can
never
learn
if
you're
always
right.
Remember
that
next
time
you're
in
a
fight.
Instead
of
planning
out
your
comeback,
let
their
point
of
view
be
inside."
For
a
good
portion
of
my
life,
I
thought
I
was
always
right.
I
would
argue
until
I
felt
my
point
outweighed
the
opposition,
and
in
the
end
if
it
didn't,
I
would
storm
out
of
the
room.
I
didn't
know
it
at
the
time,
but
when
I
acted
out
in
this
way,
my
outlook
and
ideas
became
less
valid
to
the
people
around
me.
I
would
end
up
pushing
away
the
people
I
enjoyed
communicating
with.
Finally,
I
decided
to
make
an
attitude
modification.
The
very
next
day
I
went
on
to
just
listen
to
others
speak.
There's
a
serious
difference
between
hearing
and
listening.
Someone
who
hears
you
it
thinking
about
his
or
her
reply
while
you're
still
speaking.
Nothing
you
say
is
actually
digested
as
food
for
thought.
Whereas
someone
who
listens
will
turn
the
voice
in
his
or
her
head
off
while
you're
speaking.
There
is
a
reason
we
have
2 ears
and
1 mouth.
Listen
more
than
talk.
Once
we
start
really
listening,
the
words
we
say
become
much
more
powerful.
What
comes
out
of
your
mouth
will
determine
the
rise
of
demise
of
your
intention.
The
people
that
surround
you
are
either
working
for
you,
or
against
you,
and
how
you
interact
with
these
individuals
will
be
the
deciding
factor.
Chapter
8-
Peer
Pressure:
Building
the
army
How
many
times
have
you
heard
someone
say:
"
Fuck
what
people
think!"
If
you're
anything
like
me,
it's
a
theme
that
surrounded
your
entire
high
school
career.
In
those
days,
all
I
wanted
to
do
was
stand
out.
My
hair
went
through
so
many
cuts
and
dyes,
it's
a
surprise
I
still
have
so
much
of
it.
I
wore
scarves,
band
tees,
and
tight
jeans,
and
instead
of
a
backpack,
I
carried
a
briefcase.
I
listened
to
music
that
no
one
heard
of,
and
that's
the
way
I
liked
it.
I
learned
early
on
that
the
outsiders
of
the
school
were
usually
the
most
interesting
to
me,
so
that's
what
I
became.
The
previous
friendships
I
made
through
sports
would
remain,
making
me
somewhat
of
an
insider
on
the
outside.
Looking
back,
I
never
really
showed
my
true
identity
to
any
of
my
high
school
peers.
I
was
trying
so
hard
to
find
myself
that
I
got
lost
along
the
way.
When
I
hung
with
my
skateboard
and
music
clique,
I
tried
to
hide
the
athlete
in
me,
and
when
I
was
with
my
sports
clique,
I
hid
the
artist
in
me.
I
lived
in
a
constant
state
of
transformation
with
no
destination.
I
wasn't
being
true
to
myself,
which
contaminated
my
intentions.
So
many
people
think
that
finding
yourself
is
narrowing
down
to
one
specific
answer.
There
is
no
limit
on
how
many
you's
you
can
find
within.
I
finally
accepted
the
array
of
different
people
I
was
and
became
an
individual.
From
that
day
on,
I
was
able
to
communicate
with
others
like
never
before.
Now
that
I
was
confident
and
proud
of
whom
I
was,
I
could
share
my
story
and
earn
a
spot
in
people's
minds.
Every
positive
thought
is
a
brick
in
the
foundation
of
our
lives.
No
one
can
take
away
any
of
the
bricks
we've
laid
down,
but
others
can
help
us
build
the
foundation.
1 Shoot ‘Em Down
2 Shoot ‘Em Down
3 Modivation
4 Did It Again Last Night
5 Not That Bad
6 My Hippy (feat. Dizzy Wright)
7 Howlin’ At the Moon
8 1970
9 Free Love
10 Goddess
11 My Favorite Shirt Is My Skin
12 Never Quit
13 Mushrooms
14 Same Way (Pt. 2)
15 Did I Ever Wake Up?, Pt. 1
16 Did I Ever Wake Up? (Pt. 2)
17 Did I Ever Wake Up? (Pt. 3)
18 Did I Ever Wake Up?, Pt. 4
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