Azufre literally means "sulfur," a chemical element often associated with brimstone and hell. It's a very unusual and dramatic word to find in a pop song, making it instantly memorable.
Shakira uses it to create a powerful metaphor, singing about a taste on the skin of "azufre revuelto con miel" (sulfur mixed with honey). This striking image perfectly captures the song's theme: a dangerous, toxic attraction that is also irresistibly sweet and tempting.
Lo Hecho Está Hecho ("What's Done Is Done") drops us straight into a forbidden late-night rendezvous: a hotel suite, a minibar raid, and chemistry that tastes like sulfur mixed with honey. Shakira paints a vivid picture of irresistible temptation, where danger feels delicious and rules melt away. The song’s pop-rock pulse mirrors the singer’s adrenaline as she walks "on the wild side," fully aware she’s stepping into trouble yet unable to resist the thrill.
Behind the sultry storytelling lies a message many of us know too well: repeating the same romantic mistakes, even when we can see the red flags waving. Shakira playfully owns her pattern of stumbling over the "same old stone," capturing the push-and-pull of desire versus judgment. Still, she finds liberation in accepting that everything — the pleasure, the regret, even the relationship itself — is temporary. The result is a bold anthem about embracing imperfect choices, dancing through the consequences, and recognizing that what’s done… is done.