Paramore recently announced at a concert that they wouldn’t be playing one of their earliest hits, “Misery Business,” again anytime soon.

Paramore released their first album Riot! in 2007, and one of the biggest hits from that record (and the first big hit for the band) was the song “Misery Business.” The band’s lead singer Hayley Williams was only 17 years old when she wrote the song, and though the lyrics reflect the artist’s age, the song has had some truly incredibly staying power, being a fan fave over a decade later.

The album and the song came out when many fans were right at the age where young romance can get dramatic and intense, many of us just starting high school or college, so it’s easy to feel nostalgic about the song. However, Williams hasn’t been shy about the fact that one particular lyric from “Misery Business” hasn’t aged terribly well.

In the song, Williams sings the line, “Once a whore, you’re nothing more, I’m sorry, that will never change.” It’s a line that many, including Williams herself, have decried as being anti-feminist with a distinct whiff of slut-shaming. While Williams has been very forthcoming about explaining the lyric no longer reflects her current views and was very much a product of her age, Williams and her fellow Paramore bandmates decided it was time to retire the song for now.

At a concert last night, Williams told the crowd it would be the last time the band would play “Misery Business” for quite a while. It’s a decision that has some fans saddened, but despite the song’s nostalgic power, most fans seem to understand Paramore’s choice to move on.

As NME reports, Williams explained the decision to the crowd, saying, “This is a choice that we’ve made because we feel that we should, we feel like it’s time to move away from it for a little while. This is to every bad decision that led us here, this is to all the embarrassing things we might have said, but we owned up to it and we grew.”

It’s a really important message that Paramore is helping spread by hanging up one of their most popular and requested songs. While every single one of us has done something, said something, or created something insensitive when we were younger, it’s never too late to make amends and move forward.

Cutting “Misery Business” might hit us right in the nostalgic feels, but we’re excited for this new era of amazing Paramore music.