Hábito de Ti is Vanesa Martín’s poetic confession of a love so intense it feels like an addiction. Throughout the lyrics she repeats “tengo hábito de ti” – literally “I have a habit of you” – to show that this person has become her daily ritual, the thing she cannot quit. She feels indebted to that love, willing to flip the whole world upside-down just to “gain time to go and find you.” Yet the song is not only about longing; it is also about the tug-of-war between holding on and letting go. One moment she forgets everything – even herself – inside a single kiss, the next her legs beg for “asphalt and flight,” a powerful image of wanting to break free and run toward her own future.
Martín mixes vulnerability with quiet strength. She admits the love drains her (“los besos que agotan”), but she insists on writing her own ending: “Let me invent you, let me erase your memory.” In other words, if she cannot escape the habit, she will rewrite it on her own terms. The result is a bittersweet anthem about obsession, self-rediscovery, and the courage it takes to reclaim your story when love has swallowed every line.