Just Like Heaven Link
Whether you know it as the soundtrack to your first kiss or the background to your first heartbreak, The Cure gave us a gift. They proved that the most beautiful pop music isn’t about happy endings. It’s about the terrifying, beautiful risk of loving someone despite the fact that it might disappear.
So turn it up loud. Dance to it. Cry to it. But whatever you do, don’t listen to it alone on a beach at sunset. You might not recover.
“You’re just like a dream…”
Some songs are catchy. Some are profound. And then there are songs that feel like a memory you never actually lived. For me, and for millions of others, The Cure’s Just Like Heaven is that song.
He sings about dancing in the deepest ocean and spinning in a bed of stars. It sounds like heaven. But listen closer to the lyrics. Just Like Heaven
Then, the drop. The instruments pull back, and we hear the truth:
“Why can’t I laugh without crying? / Why can’t I sleep without dreaming?” Whether you know it as the soundtrack to
And perhaps most famously, the 2005 film adaptation (starring Reese Witherspoon and Mark Ruffalo) used the song as its emotional anchor. In the film, a man visits the spot where he proposed to his late wife. The song plays. You cannot hear the opening riff without picturing that specific ache of loss. Just Like Heaven is a paradox. It makes you want to spin around in the sunshine, but it also makes you want to cry in the dark. It captures the cruel truth about happiness: You never appreciate heaven until you are standing outside looking in.
