When Iselin Solheim sings "Where are you now?" , it acts as a haunting response to Tupac’s opening line, "Is life worth living, should I blast myself?" The "monster running wild inside" represents the internal and external psychological trauma of the ghetto that Tupac spent his career fighting against. The Origins of the Two Original Tracks
Chorus (Alan Walker-style): "I'm faded, lost in the haze Memories of you, they still remain I'm searching for a way to break the pain But it's hard to find, when I'm still revived"
When 2Pac raps "I'm for real" against a melody about fading away, it sounds less like a boast and more like a desperate claim of authenticity in a world that is dissolving. The chorus transforms from a carnal question to a more existential cry. The listener begins to wonder: How does one 'want' to be remembered? How does one 'want' to live when everything seems to fade into silence?