M.I battles with the weight of being, the weight of his existence, the weight of his achievements, the weight of being a man. His recurrent discourse with a woman with whom he shares his innermost thoughts alludes to him wanting to be seen as “just a person". On his latest body of work M.I drops the bouncy feel good vibes of previous works like Rendezvous, M.I 2 for a more soul searching work. Every song is simply him unburdening his mind with the ‘weight of being’. When the Loose talk podcast recording of M.I and pulse Nigeria’s Osagie Alonge went viral, there were calls for more respect from Osagie, but there were also factions asking for M.I to have handled the situation more amicably(forgetting how anger is a natural emotion even if you are a hip-hop legend). He reinforces his zealous stand beside his family (choc city) even when it seems like a ‘me against the world scenario’. He lists signings made by chocolate city and the amazing years they have had clearly addressing one of the questions Osagie asked poking the bear and you can see that the situation replays in his mind even though he says it’s “all good". He unburdens his innermost meditations on us till we feel like a shrink listening to the ramblings of a patient. The insouciance of past albums have been dropped and he levels with us on his battles with depression, keeping up appearances, being one of the few rappers that have not moved into singing, the one looked up to when his genre is failing, the one expected to always give out handouts. He addresses all these in a way that doesn’t sound Peevish, this is M.I expounding his angst in his usual guttural manner while we rapaciously listen. A study of self worth is a methodological dissection of his innermost assertions to a point where he realises he is just a person with nothing but positivity to share.