Rosanne Cash and the Many Meanings of Love
One of the most gifted singer-songwriters of our time talks love, science and the deep space between men and women
- By Ron Rosenbaum
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2012, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
“It’s freeing to me,” Rosanne says. “The choices I’m making in another universe might be better, but they might be worse. I might be doing pretty well.”
She says her friend Randall is a multiverse skeptic. “She thinks it’s narcissism.”
“Why narcissism?”
“Because she doesn’t think that every choice you do or don’t make opens up a parallel universe. It’s not all centered around you.”
Then Rosanne tells this amazing story that might be very sad or very uplifting depending on which emotional universe you’re currently inhabiting.
“Do you know the band the Eels? OK, it’s not a very well-known band. Mark Everett, it’s basically him.
“His dad Hugh Everett was a theoretical physicist at Princeton, who, I don’t know if he invented the multiverse theory, but if he didn’t invent it, he refined it.” I wonder where this is going.
Mark found his father, Hugh, dead of a sudden heart attack, she continued. “He was a very distant father. So there were two children. [After] the father died, the daughter, Mark Everett’s sister, committed suicide so that she could be with her father in a parallel universe.”
“Oh my God,” was all I could muster. The sadness and dangerousness of theoretical physics. Like love songs. It’s all about attraction and separation isn’t it?
“It was horrible. So Mark Everett is the last of his family left. He went to Princeton and talked to his father’s colleagues and tried to understand the multiverse theory so he could find out who his dad was. And the BBC did a documentary about him. So I went to see them speak, these physicists and Mark. There was a Q&A with the audience and the last question, this woman asked the physicist, ‘So is heaven...when you die, do you just go to a parallel universe? Is that what heaven is?’”
“Is that what heaven is?” Song title!
“None of the physicists wanted to touch this question. They looked at each other and then finally one of them said, ‘It’s possible.’”
“How could it not be possible?” I ask, carried away by the novelty of the idea.
“Right,” she says. “But if it’s true, the you that’s in the parallel universe—is that the real you, and the one here is the specter?”
I feel myself being shifted, flung, back and forth between potential universes. Heaven. And, of course, I remind myself, hell. My gloomy side prompts me to say, “And there could also be a million suffering yous.”
“Exactly, exactly,” says Rosanne, who does, after all, write about suffering.
So here’s my theory about why she is attracted both to theoretical physics and to songs of love and suffering: Because quantum physics introduced the idea of ineradicable unpredictability into the orderly world of Newtonian physics. We know, for instance, that half the uranium atoms in a given amount will split in a certain time, uranium’s “half-life,” but there’s no way of predicting which atoms will stay together and which will split, emitting dangerous radioactivity. Einstein believed there were “hidden variables” we haven’t yet discovered; most quantum physicists disagree and think it’s an insoluble mystery. Quantum uncertainty. Like love. Who will stay together, who will split.
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Comments (3)
Great article! Generated interest in both the author & Rosanne, who were off my radar. This article resonated with me because it posed questions or illustrated situations that are explainable. A refreshing change from a vast tangle of "beyond words". For example: The friend's comment in this article about narcissism is a classic example of how ego gets in the way of understanding.
Posted by Jack Seeger on November 28,2012 | 12:18 AM
Great article! Generated interest in both the author & Rosanne, who were off my radar. This article resonated with me because it posed questions or illustrated situations that are explainable. A refreshing change from a vast tangle of "beyond words". For example: The friend's comment in this article about narcissism is a classic example of how ego gets in the way of understanding.
Posted by Jack Seeger on November 28,2012 | 12:18 AM
An interesting woman whom I have never appreciated until now. I will forgive the author his total misinterpretation of "Sex at Dawn" for the sake of his introducing her to me.
Posted by DBGill on June 10,2012 | 10:28 AM