I need your breeze more than I need your keys [closed]

Solution 1:

I couldn't find much information on usage of the term "breeze" in literature as a metaphor, so this answer comes entirely from personal thought rather than from examples.

I would take your breeze to mean your aura

aura, noun

the distinctive atmosphere or quality that seems to surround and be generated by a person, thing, or place

The connection bridging to two of them being, that your aura and the saying the air you have about you have the same meaning; then using breeze instead of the air you have is a more fluent phrase, and more importantly, breeze rhymes with keys

'Cause boy, I need your aura more than I need your keys

Again, just my two cents.