Ethical Adulthood: A Detroit Soundtrack | Both Sides, Now by Joni Mitchell
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What did Joni Mitchell mean when she wrote Both Sides, Now?
When I was ten years old, I asked my parents that question after learning the song on guitar. To my surprise, neither of them would answer. Instead, they both told me the same thing:
"You'll understand when you're older."
Decades later, I think I finally do.
In this episode of Ethical Adulthood: A Detroit Soundtrack, we explore the three movements of this remarkable song: childhood, love, and adulthood. Joni begins with clouds, moves through romance, and arrives at the difficult work of becoming fully human. Along the way she rejects both innocence and cynicism, arriving instead at something far more valuable: humility.
What happens when certainty falls away? What is gained when we stop pretending we have life figured out? And why do some songs take a lifetime to understand?
Join me as we look at one of the most beloved songs of the twentieth century and discover why "I really don't know life at all" may be one of the wisest things ever written.
Ethical Adulthood: A Detroit Soundtrack is a podcast about music, meaning, and the lifelong work of becoming.