(Chorus) C I give up trying F At least for today Em Lying is lying Dm It's never okay.. C Bend it all you want.. D Hide it all you can.. F I give up trying G I give up trying F Em I am better off without you Dm C I am better off without you Gm I'm so angry towards you.. Capo on the 1st Fret [Intro] C F Oh oh oh oh oh C G Oh oh oh oh oh C F Oh oh oh oh oh C G C Oh oh oh oh oh [Verse 1] C I messed up tonight F I lost another fight C G I still mess up but I'll just start again C I keep falling down F I keep on hitting the ground C G C I always get up now to see what's next [Pre-Chorus] C F Birds don't just fly C Till I reach the C end. And then I’ll start G again. No I won't C leave. I wanna try F everything. I wanna try C even though G I could fail C. (Bridge) F I'll keep on C making those Am new G mistakes. F I'll keep on C making them Am eve ry F day. Those new mist akes. It will sound almost like F chord but littlebit easier. Use that untill you practise enough for regular F in barre chord form. It is easier to learn the F barre chord shape with the barre at the 5th fret where it makes an A chord. The barre is progressively more difficult as you move towards the nut. Sometimes chord progressions are referred to by numbers and this can make talking about music sound complicated. It actually just means that chords are built on a certain note of the major scale. For example, G-C-D is a ‘I-IV-V’ (one-four-five) progression in the key of G because G, C and D are the fi rst, fourth and fifth notes of the G 3. Strum your guitar with a pick or your fingers. Hold down the strings with your fingers in the appropriate shape and try to strum with your other hand. Acoustic guitar strings often have higher actions than electric guitars, so you may have to press down very hard to get a good sound. FEVvtK.

chord i give up trying