“Hijos del Verbo Amar” paints a cinematic portrait of two wild hearts who refuse to bow to the poisoned world beneath their feet. Wrapped in vivid images—burning clothes, marching under rain, suitcases aimed straight at the sun—Pablo López celebrates lovers who dare to shout, dance, and reinvent themselves instead of hiding their scars. They are “children of the verb amar,” blessed by the earth itself, and their battle cry is simple: long live love, long live those who kiss as if tonight were the last moon.
The song is a rallying anthem for freedom seekers. It urges us to burn away fear, outwit whatever “god” tries to cage us, and waltz through life with fearless passion. By the final chorus, we are invited to join this intimate revolution—packing our own “maleta,” stepping into the sun, and guarding our liberty so that nobody can silence our voices or steal our capacity to love wildly.