“Heaven” moves like a nocturnal confession, unfolding in shadows where desire and distance mirror each other. Pearly Drops frame love as something both sacred and unsettling, a place that promises salvation while quietly pulling the ground away beneath your feet. The song circles the tension between closeness and escape, where one person becomes a refuge and a reminder of what the other is running from.
Drift through forest imagery and darkness, blurring the line between self and other. Seeing the lover as a former version of oneself turns intimacy into reflection, suggesting that longing is as much internal as it is shared. The repeated question of whether heaven is real lands softly, less a challenge than a fragile realization that transcendence can live inside another person, even if it cannot last.






