The song revolves around how Lil Baby's life is different from what it had been in the past, as well as his pressures of being a role model[1] and the results of him being in a higher social position.
[1] Brandon Yu of Variety praised the sampling in the song, writing that it "briefly seems to promise something newly earnest or ambitious", but then wrote, "The moment is short-lived, as a nameless set of hi-hats and lifeless 808s take the wheel, and the typical Baby sound washes over.
On the opening track, the most vivid he gets comes down to clunky bars about his newfound A-list status: 'Got my name from the ghetto / But I'm bigger now / I can go to dinner with Corey Gamble and Miss Jenner now.
'"[2] Shanté Collier-McDermott of Clash wrote favorably the use of the sample, describing it as "Sombre sounding but expertly setting the tone.
"[3] Like Shorter, Niall Smith of NME also wrote that the album "starts strong" with the track, which he called "a street-cured motivational anthem populated with cautionary tales and status-affirming quotables".