Mujhe Pata Hai Lyrics – Miclody

Mujhe Pata Hai Lyrics – Miclody

Gen-Z Lyrics brings you Mujhe Pata Hai Lyrics, performed by Miclody. The concept for this Hindi & Urdu track originated with Sana Fahad, who went on to craft it into a impactful masterpiece. The song came to life through Miclody, the producer behind it.



Mujhe Pata Hai Miclody Lyrics

मुझे पता है
वफ़ा नहीं है
ना उसके जुम्ले
ना उसका चेहरा
ना उसकी आँखैं
ना मुस्कुराहट
कहीं नहीं है
मुझे पता है

मैं अपने हिस्से के दर्द सारे
उसे दिखा कर भी क्या करूंगा?
ना वो यहाँ है ना वो कभी था
ये उसका होना भी आरज़ी है
वो जो मेरा था, वो अब नहीं है
मुझे पता है

ये हाल मेरा है मेरा हासिल
बहुत जुनून से परे सुकून से
ये मैंने सींचा है हसरतों से
उसे बता के इसे भी रोदूं?
चलो ये तज़लील भी चल जाएगी
यही सही है
मुझे पता है

सुकून के लम्हे खुशी के मंज़र
मैं उस जहाँ से हूँ भाग आया
यहाँ तो जो भी है, बेज़मीन है
वो चाहे मैं हूँ या और कोई
मैं ये ना मानूं तो मुनकिरि है
मुझे पता है

हसब शनास और मिज़ाज वाक़िफ़
ना मैं कभी था ना अब भी हूँगा
बहुत से लोगों से चोट खा के
वहीं खड़ा हूँ जहाँ कभी था
ये मेरा अंदाज़-ए-ख़ुदसारी है

मुझे पता है
के कुछ भी हो पर
वफ़ा नहीं है
कहीं नहीं है

written by: Sana Fahad

“Mujhe Pata Hai” Song Meaning Explained

The Big Picture

This song feels like a slow, honest confession folded into a melody, it takes the idea of knowing something deep down and sits with it until the truth stops hurting so much, or at least becomes something you can carry. The title, Mujhe pata hai, is a quiet claim of certainty, but it isn’t triumphant, it’s resigned, the kind of knowing that comes after you have tried everything else. Right away the title frames the whole song as a calm ledger of loss, not loud anger, not dramatic breaking, but an intimate catalog of what is and what was not.

Calling the song that puts you in the speaker’s shoes, it asks you to accept the truth with them… to watch them mark the small evidences of absence. The mood is close, like a late night talk with someone who keeps repeating the same sentence until you both understand what it costs to say it out loud.

Most Impactful Lines

There are lines that make me rewind, not because the music changes, but because the words cut so precise. Wafa nahi hai — that short line lands like a verdict, simple and savage, it turns an entire relationship into an absence. Then later, Na wo yahan hai na wo kabhi tha, that one is the hard proof, the memory of someone who maybe was only imagined, or maybe was only briefly real.

And this one, it sticks with me every time: Ye mainy seencha hai hasraton say, the image of having watered desires, nurtured hopes, only to realize they were feeding an empty field. That imagery are quietly brutal, because it shows effort, it shows care, and care turned out to be a one sided ritual. Honestly, these lines are the ones you sing under your breath when you don’t want to admit the hurt to anyone.

Decoding The Chorus

The chorus is where the song breathes and where the confession becomes universal. It opens with the repeated, almost mantra like Mujhe pata hai, that repetition is not arrogance, it’s an attempt to steady the self, to say the truth until it feels like something you can stand on. The very next turn, Ke kuch bhi ho par, reads like an acknowledgment that the world will keep spinning regardless, which makes the speaker’s certainty both small and enormous at the same time.

When it lands on Wafa nahi hai, Kahin nahi hai, the chorus pivots from knowing to acceptance, and it does so without theatrical drama. It’s not a shout, it’s a closing of a book. Each fragment of the chorus peels back a layer, the first sets the fact, the middle shows the consequences, the last one whispers the reason you stop expecting return on your emotional investment. It’s quiet, but it hits, because the melody carries the ache and the words do the paperwork.

Most Relatable Part

For me, the most human bit is when the singer wonders whether to show the wounds to the person who caused them — that small moral question is everything. Usay dikha kar bhi kia karunga? It are that ridiculous hope that telling someone will change them, or make them apologize, or heal you, when deep down you know it won’t. That moment are so recognisable, because we all reach for that reconciliation even after we’ve been burned many times.

Also the admission of walking away from peace, Sukun ke lamhay khushi ke manzar, Mai us jahan say hoon bhag aya, that’s painfully honest. You see the speaker choosing exile from joy because the memory of the other made even happy things feel tainted, that is a real, messy human choice. It are the small everyday compromises that make this song feel like it’s written about your friend, or you, or someone you know.

Conclusion & Overall Message

In the end the song leaves you with a calm certainty that is almost a kind of dignity. It doesn’t demand pity, it doesn’t ask for revenge, it simply marks the truth and moves on. Mujhe pata hai becomes a closer, a way to stop pretending, a small ritual of honesty you perform so you can sleep. The takeaway for me is this: knowing is not the same as being healed, but it is the first step toward not handing your hopes to someone who won’t keep them.

And personally, that are what keeps me replaying it, because every listen is a tiny rehearsal for courage, the courage to say to yourself what you were too proud or too afraid to say out loud. It are simple, it are quiet, and it hits different each time… honestly, that’s why this song still live in my head after the music stops.

Mujhe Pata Hai Song Video

Mujhe Pata Hai Song Credits

Song Details