“KELOIDE” is Feid’s lyrical way of pointing at the emotional scars that love can leave behind. A queloide (keloid) is a scar that keeps growing instead of fading, and in this song the Colombian artist compares that stubborn mark to a relationship he just can’t heal from. He brags, sulks, flirts and confesses all at once: he pushed his girl away, yet he came running back; he pretends he’s fine, but every memory reopens the wound. Between the playful Spanglish lines and street-smart swagger, Feid admits that missing her is “teso” (really tough) and that the cold seeps “to his bones.” The chorus drives it home – he cursed her out, left, then returned only to feel the same sting, proving those keloid-like feelings are still raw.
Under the catchy reggaetón beat, you hear a tug-of-war between pride and vulnerability. He flexes about “la chimba más chimba del building” and their former “Dream Team” status, yet quickly pleads, “Mami, don’t worry… I’ll do anything for you.” The track captures modern love’s contradictions: public confidence vs. private longing, toxic cycles vs. genuine attachment, and the struggle to move on when the heart insists on staying. In short, “KELOIDE” is a dance-floor confession that even the coolest scars can still hurt – and sometimes we keep scratching them ourselves.