Un Millón Como Tú – Lasso & Cami | Spanish Lyrics, Meaning & a Song About Denial After a Breakup

When Everyone Says “You’ll Get Over It” (And You Don’t)

Breakups often come with a chorus of well-meaning advice.

“There are plenty of fish in the sea.”

“You’ll forget them soon.”

“They weren’t that special.”

Un millón como tú is about what happens after those words are said. When everyone around you insists that the person you lost is replaceable, while your body, your sleep, and your thoughts clearly disagree.

This duet works because of contrast. Lasso and Cami sing from a place of vulnerability and irony. The song starts by repeating what friends say, almost trying to believe it. And then, slowly, it collapses under its own weight.

For Spanish learners, this song is especially valuable:

  • clear pronunciation
  • conversational structures
  • repetition that builds emotional meaning
  • simple metaphors used to express denial and realization

Linguistically, it sits comfortably at A2 to B1 level, but emotionally, it hits much deeper.

  1. When Everyone Says “You’ll Get Over It” (And You Don’t)
  2. 🎵 Un millón como tú – Spanish → English Translation
  3. 📘 Vocabulary Builder
  4. 🧠 Quiz Yourself: Did You Catch These?
  5. ✨ Final thoughts: When Denial Finally Cracks

🎵 Un millón como tú – Spanish → English Translation

Cuento hasta diez para entender que tú no vas a volver

I count to ten to understand that you are not coming back

¿Cómo hago yo pa’ respirar?

How am I supposed to breathe?

Si no dejo de llorar

If I cannot stop crying

Y mis amigos me dicen

And my friends tell me

“Qué buena noticia que ya tú no estás”

“What good news that you are gone”

Dicen que ya no te llame

They say I should not call you anymore

Que una botella me hará olvidar

That a bottle will make me forget

Y repiten, repiten que…

And they repeat, repeat that…

Tú al final no eres tan especial

In the end, you are not that special

No caminas sobre el mar

You do not walk on water

Ni haces oro de cristal

Nor do you turn glass into gold

Sólo hay que buscar

You just have to look

Hay un millón como tú

There are a million like you

Esta canción nunca debió hablar tan mal de tú y yo

This song should have never spoken so badly of you and me

Pero aquí estoy, pluma y papel

But here I am, pen and paper

Tratando de serte cruel

Trying to be cruel to you

Y todo porque mis amigas celebran

And all because my friends celebrate

Felices que ya tú no estás

Happily that you are gone

Dicen que ya no te llame

They say I should not call you

Que me busque a otro para olvidar

That I should find someone else to forget

Si hay un millón como tú

If there are a million like you

¿Por qué no puedo dormir?

Why can’t I sleep?

¿Por qué dejé de comer?

Why did I stop eating?

No sé si es de noche o de día

I don’t know if it’s night or day

Tú al final, sí eras muy especial

In the end, yes, you were very special

Ya no quiero escuchar

I don’t want to hear anymore

Que se callen los demás

Let everyone else be quiet

No hay nadie más

There is no one else

Nadie es como tú

No one is like you

📘 Vocabulary Builder

Recommended level: A2–B1

💬 Emotional and Everyday Vocabulary

SpanishEnglishNotes
volverto returnCore breakup verb
llorarto cryEmotional verb
olvidarto forgetCentral theme
buscarto look forMetaphorical use
especialspecialIronically repeated

🤠 Expressions and Metaphors

Spanish phraseMeaningWhy it matters
contar hasta diezcount to tenCalm down, process
caminar sobre el marwalk on waterBe extraordinary
hacer oro de cristalturn glass into goldImpossible ideal
pluma y papelpen and paperWriting emotions
que se callenlet them be quietEmotional boundary

🧠 Quiz Yourself: Did You Catch These?

Try answering without rereading the lyrics.

1️⃣ What does “contar hasta diez” suggest in the song?

A. Anger

B. Panic

C. Trying to calm down and accept reality

D. Forgetting on purpose

Answer C. Trying to calm down and accept reality

2️⃣ Why does the song repeat “hay un millón como tú”?

A. To convince others

B. To convince the singer

C. To insult the ex

D. To celebrate freedom

Answer B. To convince the singer

3️⃣ What do “no caminas sobre el mar” and “no haces oro de cristal” mean together?

A. The person is boring

B. The person is rich

C. The person is not magical or extraordinary

D. The person is dishonest

Answer C. The person is not magical or extraordinary

4️⃣ When does the emotional shift happen in the song?

A. At the beginning

B. When friends speak

C. When the questions start

D. When the singer admits “sí eras muy especial”

Answer D. When the singer admits “sí eras muy especial”

✨ Final thoughts: When Denial Finally Cracks

Un millón como tú is honest because it lets denial speak first. It repeats the lies we tell ourselves after heartbreak, until they stop working.

For Spanish learners, this song shows how simple language can carry emotional complexity. No advanced grammar. No difficult structures. Just repetition, contrast, and truth arriving late.

If you want to keep learning Spanish through songs like this, or if you want guidance from a teacher who explains not just what words mean, but why they hurt:

📩 Write to me at

effietrumpet19@gmail.com

Because sometimes language learning is also about learning how emotions are said.

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