Olivia Rodrigo’s “The Cure” Is a Masterclass in Emotional Honesty

Olivia Rodrigo’s “The Cure” Is a Masterclass in Emotional Honesty

On “The Cure,” Olivia Rodrigo is infatuated, but also distracted. “All the pretty girls in the foreground of my mind,” she murmurs in the opening verse. As she strums an acoustic guitar, her thoughts unspool. Wasn’t love supposed to be the antidote to a head full of poison, a heart full of doubt? And sure, he does his best to suck out the venom, offering compliments and reminders that comparison is the thief of joy. He means it every time, and you’re always grateful, because maybe affirmations are like apples; one a day keeps the doctor away, something like that.

While self-doubt and jealousy are well-established themes across Rodrigo’s catalog, here she seems to finally internalize a bitter truth: Love isn’t a quick fix. Some problems are your own to solve. But it’s exhausting to lay awake at night, batting down bad thoughts. “I’m unraveled,” Rodrigo admits, her voice fraying into multi-tracked harmonic strands.

“The Cure” builds gradually across five minutes, with orchestral strings and a stately piano weaving through the chorus. As the realization that nothing—or no one—will be enough overcomes the final bridge, a flurry of drums gallop in and the track explodes into fireworks as Rodrigo screams her guts out. “The Cure”’s emotional wallop feels like a mature step forward for the 23-year-old songwriter. There’s no toxic ex to rage against, only her own reflection. And, somehow, that has to be enough.