**Abrojo** is the Spanish word for a "burr," the prickly seed from a plant that clings stubbornly to clothes and fur. It's a very specific and uncommon word to find in a song.
Maria Becerra uses it as a powerful metaphor for intense attachment, singing "Yo te pegué como un abrojo" (I stuck to you like a burr). This line paints a vivid picture of a relationship where two people were once inseparable, making their current separation even more painful.
“Mi Debilidad” is Maria Becerra’s ultra–catchy confession of how hard it is to cut the emotional cord with someone who still makes your heart race. Over a rhythmic urban-pop beat, the Argentine star admits she hears rumors that her ex regrets leaving, but he has not said a word to her. That silence leaves her “buscándote sin GPS” – roaming without direction – while every street corner, every thought, drags her back to him. She is torn between anger (she “can’t forgive”) and an almost magnetic desire to run into his arms again, even if it costs her “intereses” on the emotional debt she already owes.
Maria plays with vivid images: she’s stuck to him like an “abrojo” (a burr), and an unbreakable “hilo rojo” (red string of fate) ties her heart to his. “Mi debilidad” becomes both a confession and a chorus; loving him is her weak spot, yet the song turns that vulnerability into a powerful, sing-along hook. In short, it’s a relatable anthem for anyone who has tried—and hilariously failed—to delete a love that keeps popping back up on life’s playlist.