It was nominated by the Source Awards for Single of the Year (Male Solo Artist).
One of the most introspective and spiritual songs by 2Pac, this song talks about how he would rest in peace, and that he would eventually find happiness when he is in a place where all the troubles and pains of his life come to an end, and that he would want to end up in that place of peace after he dies; he also name-drops various figures of African American cultural history (namely: Marvin Gaye, Billie Holiday, Jackie Wilson, Sam Cooke, Malcolm X, Miles Davis) and recent political events (i.e., Latasha Harlins), all of whom he believed to be in heaven.
The track went on to become one of Tupac's biggest hits — Anthony Hamilton, who featured in one of the versions released in Better Dayz, said that Tupac lived through the song, whose message resonated even further due to his death.
[1] Saul Williams, who performed the lead role in the Broadway musical Holler If Ya Hear Me featuring music by Tupac, said that in the song's lyrics about seeking a final escape to a relentlessly violent reality, Tupac "raises a real question which I feel is extremely sincere, which is: if you are exposed to great levels of violence and poverty, how can you really be expected to even know how to make informed choices?
The true original version, produced by Johnny "J", has never been officially released.