Sarra is a popular Mexican slang word that means something is 'lame', 'crappy', or of poor quality. It's an informal but very expressive word that you'll hear in casual conversations.
In the song, the artist laments, "Y neta que sarra tener que mirarla de cerca" (And for real, how crappy to have to see her up close), referring to his ex-girlfriend's mother. The word perfectly captures the awkwardness and frustration of the situation, making it a great piece of authentic slang to learn.
Fuerza Regida’s "Como Tú" feels like opening a late-night voice note from a friend who is half laughing, half crying. Over a backdrop of Regional Mexican guitar and tuba, the singer unleashes raw confessions about an ex who turned his world upside down. He says he ditched his friends, drowned his nights in whiskey and weed, and even pays her bills with gigs on his guitar, yet she still left him "bien jodido." The constant flip between Spanish and English mirrors his own emotional switches: I need ya, I want ya, I love ya, I hate ya.
Beneath the bold language and street-wise swagger lies a classic heartbreak corrido about shattered future plans. He once dreamed they would grow old together, but now he is stuck facing cold nights without her and awkward run-ins with the ex-mother-in-law. "Como Tú" captures that messy, relatable moment when love, anger, pride, and regret collide, all wrapped in a modern, bicultural sound that makes the pain feel both intimate and anthemic.