Arrebatan comes from the verb arrebatar, which literally means "to snatch" or "to grab violently". It's a powerful verb that suggests being taken by an irresistible force.
In this song, Alvaro Díaz uses it poetically when he sings, "Tus ojitos a mí me arrebatan" (Your little eyes captivate me). He's saying her gaze is so powerful it completely steals his attention and carries him away, showing the intensity of his attraction. This figurative use makes it a very dramatic and memorable word.
BYAK plunges us into the push-and-pull of a fiery, on-again-off-again romance where temptation always wins over logic; Alvaro Díaz and Rauw Alejandro trade verses that confess how their lovers’ quarrels, jealousy games and late-night messages only fuel an explosive chemistry they can’t quit. The lyrics paint a cycle: they fight, drift apart, then gravity drags them back into steamy encounters full of bold imagery (sexts, bedroom dominance, windows fogging up). Beneath the explicit sensuality pulses a relatable theme: two people who know they are “bad” for each other yet crave the rush of reconnection because it feels uniquely intense, “diferente.” In short, the song is a mischievous ode to that intoxicating relationship we cannot explain or escape, wrapped in slick rhythms that make the confessional feel like a seductive secret shared on the dance floor.