Ranjheya Lyrics – Tony Kakkar

Ranjheya Lyrics – Tony Kakkar

Gen-Z Lyrics brings you Ranjheya Lyrics, performed by Tony Kakkar. The concept for this Hindi track originated with Tony Kakkar, who went on to craft it into a impactful masterpiece. The song came to life through Tony Kakkar, the producer behind it.



Ranjheya Tony Kakkar Lyrics

रांझेया ख़यालों में
आया मेरे रात भर
दूर तुमसे हो गए
हमको लग गई नज़र
रांझेया ख़यालों में
आया मेरे रात भर
दूर तुमसे हो गए
हमको लग गई नज़र
रांझेया ख़यालों में

क्या करें हमको तेरी
आती बड़ी याद है
दिन कट जाता है पर
कटती न रात है
नज़र फेरना नहीं
राहों में मिल जाए अगर
दूर तुमसे हो गए
हमको लग गई नज़र
रांझेया ख़यालों में

कोई तो पुराने सनम
रिश्ते होंगे दिल के
वरना इस दुनिया में
हम नहीं मिलते
मांगेंगे दुआओं में तुम्हें
सुना है होता है असर
दूर तुमसे हो गए
हमको लग गई नज़र
रांझेया ख़यालों में

written by: Tony Kakkar

“Ranjheya” Song Meaning Explained

The Big Picture

Ranjheya already tells you this is not just a name, it feels like a calling, almost like the song is reaching out to someone who lives in memory more than in front of the eyes, and that is really the whole mood here. The title frames the song like a longing that has no proper ending, the kind that keeps circling back in the head late at night, when everything else has gone quiet and one person suddenly becomes the whole world. It is tender, a little restless, and honestly, that is what makes it hit so hard, because it does not try to be loud about heartbreak, it just sits inside it and breathes.

What I love is how the title makes the whole song feel like a memory speaking, not a person showing off pain. It is soft, but it is not weak. There is this feeling that love has slipped away, or maybe it was never fully held in the first place, and now all that remains is the echo of it. That is the emotional doorway of the song, simple on the surface, but it opens into something much heavier once you stay with it for a minute.

Most Impactful Lines

Kya karein humko teri, Aati badi yaad hai always feels like the real wound of the song to me, because it is not dramatic in a flashy way, it is just honest. That kind of remembering is exhausting, it sneaks into the day, into the night, into every small pause, and suddenly the person is there again. Then Din kat jaata hai par, Kat ti na raat hai lands even harder, because daytime can be survived, it has movement and distraction, but night is where the silence starts talking back. That line are about the kind of loneliness that feels physical, like time itself is refusing to move properly.

And then there is Maange ge duaon mein tumhe, Suna hai hota hai asar, which hits in such a delicate way… because this is where the song turns from sadness into hope, or maybe desperation dressed up as hope. It is such a human thing to do, when love is out of reach, you start asking for it in prayer, in memory, in whatever little corner still listens. That is why it sticks, it does not sound like a perfect love story, it sounds like a person trying every possible way to hold on.

Decoding The Chorus

Ranjheya khayalon mein is a tiny line, but it opens the whole emotional room. It says the beloved is no longer just someone outside, they have moved inside the mind, living there rent free, looping through thoughts again and again. Then Aaya mere raat bhar gives that haunting late night feeling, like the memory does not even wait for permission, it just arrives and stays. After that, Door tumse ho gaye makes the pain plain and direct, no fancy language, just distance, just absence, just that awful realization that the closeness is gone.

And then Humko lag gayi nazar, that part adds a kind of folk belief to the heartbreak, like maybe this separation is not only sadness, maybe it is bad luck, an unseen force, something that has touched the relationship and made it fragile. I think that is such a cool choice because it gives the song a little bit of old soul, it feels rooted in how people actually speak when they are hurt. When the chorus comes back again, it does not just repeat words, it repeats obsession, like the mind cannot let go, so the song cannot let go either.

Most Relatable Part

The most relatable part for me is that whole stretch where the song admits that the day passes, but the night refuses to. That feeling is so real, maybe more real than people like to say out loud. During the day you manage, you answer messages, you move around, you act normal, but once it gets quiet, suddenly you are back in the same place emotionally, thinking of one person like they are a missing piece of your own routine. That is the kind of loneliness this song understands beautifully, not the cinematic kind, the private kind.

Also, the idea of asking for someone in prayers feels deeply human to me. Even people who are not especially religious do that in some form, they hope, they wish, they negotiate with the universe a little. That part makes the song feel lived in, not written from a distance. It sounds like something somebody would actually say when they are trying to survive a breakup, or a separation, or just the weird ache of loving someone who is suddenly far away.

Conclusion & Overall Message

By the end, Ranjheya leaves you with this quiet truth, love does not always disappear when people do. Sometimes it stays behind in the mind, in the night, in the prayers, in the little lines you keep repeating to yourself without meaning to. The song is not trying to fix that pain, it is just giving it a voice, and honestly, that is enough. That is why it stays with you after the music stops, because it understands that heartbreak is not always a scream, sometimes it is a soft name said over and over, like maybe saying it again will bring something back.

Ranjheya Song Video

Ranjheya Song Credits

Song Details