The Moutain
PLUS: How to Internet - 2025 Edition
Howdy! Welcome! This is the “Morning Signal” newsletter—your monthly dose of new ideas and productivity guides.
In today’s edition:
Reversible and Irreversible Decisions
How to Internet - 2025 Edition
The Soundtrack of My Life
Reversible and Irreversible Decisions
Reversible decisions are doors that open both ways. Irreversible decisions are doors that allow passage in only one direction; if you walk through, you are stuck there. Most decisions are the former and can be reversed (even though we can never recover the invested time and resources).
(Source)
Insight
Laurie Deschene on moving forward:
“Even if you’ve made choices you wouldn’t make based on what you know now, you don’t deserve to feel inadequate, ashamed, unworthy, or inferior to anyone else. You don’t deserve the anguish of beating yourself up over the past, or the insatiable emptiness that comes from believing you’re fundamentally lacking. No matter where you’ve been, you deserve the opportunity to go where you’re going, less burdened by your own mind.”
(Source)
A Tiny Thought
Short-term easy is long-term hard. Short-term hard is long-term easy.
I was reminded of this when one of my kids came home with a grade that wasn’t up to his standards. Rather than look at the feedback and dive in, he said, “oh, I understand it now.”
I called his bluff. When I asked him to “explain it to me” because I didn’t understand it, he stalled. He didn’t understand. This lesson isn’t just for kids.
We’d rather do the easy thing than the hard thing. That’s natural and normal. I call this the mountain. You can climb it, or you can avoid it, but it’s not going away. There is always a mountain. There is always something in front of us that we know we should do, but it just seems so … hard.
On any given day, we can avoid the climb. We can stand at the bottom, look up, and say, “I’ll wait. Hopefully, the mountain isn’t here tomorrow.” But we all know the mountain is still there tomorrow. And instead of looking smaller, it’s even larger.
When I talked to Jerzy Gregorek about the mountain, he said. “Easy decisions, hard life. Hard decisions, easy life.”
The easy path today makes a hard path tomorrow. The hard path today makes an easier path tomorrow.
The choice is yours, but the mountain isn’t going away. The longer you put off the hard thing you know you need to do, the harder it becomes to get started.
The climb is the fun part.
Warren Buffett, in a rare 1972 letter on creating a brand
“People are going to be affected not only by how our candy tastes, but obviously, by what they hear about it from others as well as the “retailing environment” in which it appears. The latter includes the class of store, the method of packaging, the condition in which it appears, and the surrounding merchandise. Just as the New Yorker creates a different “editorial environment” for a Lord & Taylor ad than does the Village Voice, so do the surroundings in which our candy is offered affect potential customers’ mental – and even gastronomical – impression of our quality. …. It should be very hard to get, available only periodically, and then (to the consumer) apparently only in limited quantities.”
(Source)
You can’t just sit around waiting for the answers:
“Young lawyers frequently come to me and say, ‘How can I quit practicing law and become a billionaire instead?’ I say, well, it reminds me of a story they tell about Mozart.
A young man came to him, and he said, ‘I want to compose symphonies. I want to talk to you about that.’
Mozart said, ‘How old are you?’ ‘Twenty-two.’
And Mozart said, ‘You’re too young to do symphonies.’
And the guy says, ‘But you were writing symphonies when you were ten years old.’
He says, ‘Yes, but I wasn’t running around asking other people how to do it.’”
(Source)
100+ Productivity Tools
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List of 100+ Productivity Tools
Hope you will find it useful.
Statistics
80% of our time is spent on non-urgent, non-important tasks.
The average knowledge worker checks their email 30 times per hour.
We spend an average of 2 hours per day on social media.
We only remember about 20% of what we read.
It takes an average of 25 minutes to get back to work after being interrupted.
We make 35,000 decisions per day.
We're only productive for about 2 hours per day.
Taking a walk can boost your productivity by 20%.
Getting enough sleep can improve your productivity by 30%.
Taking breaks throughout the day can help you stay focused and productive.
Taking a 15-minute break every 2 hours can boost your productivity.
A study by RescueTime found that the average worker is interrupted every 11 minutes.
We're more productive when we're working on something we're interested in.
We're more productive when we're working in a quiet environment.
Taking a nap can improve your productivity.
Being organized can boost your productivity.
Having a to-do list can help you stay on track and be more productive.
Useful Links
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Decks > Custom pitch decks for startup
Tool Finder > The best place to find productivity tools
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Dockhunt > Discover the apps everyone is docking about
CleanPresenter > Present a single window instead of your whole desktop
How to Internet - 2025 Edition
Even after it became obvious that Facebook was an invasive cancer on not just the Internet, but all society, I kept my account. There were too many ways it was ingrained into my life. It was the way my cycling club announced rides and planned events. Friends who moved away years ago kept in touch with me through Facebook. So many people on the job where I worked for 20 years had accounts and I could up with them. I had 16 years of photos from family birthday parties, Christmas get-togethers and I could see my grandchildren's first days of school and their graduations. That's what kept me there. It wasn't for the opportunity to look at and post memes or to preach to the choir or lecture people on how to feel about this or that, although I did do some of all of that too. I'd use it occasionally when I got bored to see clips of the Beatles, old boxing matches and baseball games from my youth. It was good for that.
I had a Twitter account too, but it was never that important to me. I didn't have many real relationships there. I mainly followed hard new journalists and tech people. I liked to follow it during presidential debates, which make my stomach hurt if I try to watch them. I'd much rather read the astonished takes from journos about whatever put-downs the politicians were using on each other. When I started blogging, I used Twitter as just another place to put links to my app reviews and Obsidian how-to articles. I talked to a few people, but all my real interacting was happening on Mastodon. Finally, I decided I just couldn't be someone who hung out at that particular Nazi bar just to get a few more eyeballs on my little personal, non-monetized blog. I closed my account and didn't have a single emotion as a result. It was just checking something off a to-do list.
When Mark Zuckerberg, while wearing a $900,000 watch, announced last week that Meta was going to stop fact checking, I knew the end was near. Then that asshole went on Joe Rogan and lied. He claimed he was bullied by the meanies in the Biden administration who yelled at him for letting Republicans tell people not to wear masks or get vaccinated during the deadliest pandemic in a century. That was followed by an announcement that Meta was going to end its diversity, equity, and inclusion programs. As if that weren't enough, Facebook deleted content it had bragged about creating for trans and non-binary people. I couldn't take it.
I sat down and marked my Threads and Instagram accounts for deletion. I requested an archive of the thousands of pictures and posts I had on Facebook, dating all the way back to the George W. Bush administration. When that comes through, Facebook is gone. Down here in the south we still have plenty of all white organizations ranging from private swimming pools, to country clubs to churches and ceremonial military units. Those are just the organized all white organizations. Lots of ad hoc groups are intensely exclusionary, too. I made a point a long, long time ago to avoid all of that and never, ever willingly participate or endorse all white spaces. I'm not going to participate in fact free or gay free or trans free spaces either. I'm not going to be responsible for a single set of eyes looking at a damn thing Mark Zuckerberg or Elon Musk profit from. I am embarrassed that it took me so long.
It's been a decade since Facebook ran an experiment on the accounts of a whopping 600,000 people to see if it could make them sad by what it exposed them to. Yeah, they really did that and it worked. People found about it. It made the news. Nothing ever came of it because in America, billionaires are like Ricky Bobby's sons. They get to do whatever they want.
You do you. I'm not here to tell you that using Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, or Threads makes you a bad person. If you stay, I'll assume that you have a good reason. I just can't think of one that would let me use something that will be a prime means of spreading disinformation to millions of people, disinformation that will hurt and possibly even kill them. Too dramatic? I think not. That's what it comes down to. The people running that company and the politicians they are now supporting don't give a shit if you live or die. They just want to extract as much wealth from you as they can.
Get a Mastodon account. Get a Bluesky account. Just stay away from billionaire owned manipulation machines.
Don’t Let Comparison Crush You
The biggest hurdle when starting something new is comparing our first attempts to the masterpieces of others. It’s soul-crushing! Imagine playing your first chess match against a world champion or taking your Level 1 character with a wooden stick into battle against a fire-breathing dragon. Neither scenario will end well.
In games, you face challenges appropriate to your skill level. The same should be true for tackling life’s creative dragons. Start where you are and let the process guide you forward.
Thanks to our hyperconnected world, we’re bombarded with images of success: productive, fit, happy, and wildly accomplished people. The gap between their stardom and our humble beginnings feels insurmountable. But with experience, the chasm shrinks. Challenges look intimidating because you haven’t yet wrestled with them.
Psychologists describe this as affordances: our capabilities shape how we perceive the world. Overweight people view hills as steeper; new cyclists see distances as longer; college freshmen estimate stacks of books to be heavier than seniors do. As novices, our minds exaggerate difficulties. With expertise, even tough tasks seem manageable. So remember: the gap between you and your ideals isn’t as vast as it seems—it only feels that way now.
The Soundtrack of My Life
Fifteen years ago, I had this idea for a blog post called The Soundtrack of My Life. The idea was to look back at all the songs that have played an intricate part of my life then list and discuss them. I love music and I have hundreds upon hundreds of songs that I love, so it’s daunting to think about sitting down and trying to list songs that actually affected my life or defined a moment of my life versus songs that I enjoy listening to.
While working on this list, I discovered a lot about what I listened to, how my musical tastes changed, and the role music plays in your life. Looking over this list, I see a handful of songs I listen to regularly, but a lot of this was just background noise during big changes in my lifetime. It’s a little wild how they sort of imprint on your mind, whether the experience are good or bad.
In order to create this list, I’ve placed the songs in chronological order in which they came into my life. This is NOT by the release year of the song. Some of the songs were several years removed from when they were first released. So when you see a date, just know that’s an estimate of when the song came into my life and made an impact.
1986 – Glory of Love – Peter Cetera
This is the first song I ever remember enjoying. The Karate Kid II came out in 1986, so I would have made me three or four years old when around the time that I heard it. I have a vivid memory of pulling up to my uncle’s house while The Glory of Love was playing on the radio and my dad turning our old Nissan Stanza fan off. I squealed out that we had to turn the car back on and my parents sat there in amazement as their tiny child demanded to listen to Peter Cetera. Yea… I was a weird kid.
1988 – Don’t Worry, Be Happy – Bobby McFerrin
What do I remember about 1988? Well, I remember Spud MacKenzie, getting the USS Flagg for my birthday, and the music video for Don’t Worry, Be Happy. This song was another song that was played a lot on the radio and MTV, and I was fascinated by the minimalistic music video. It would fifteen years before I’d recognize Robin Williams was in the video.
1989 – Kokomo – The Beach Boys
I liked Glory of Love, but I LOVED Kokomo. Kokomo came out in 1988 and the song was all over the radio. The fun, tropical beat really appealed to me. One afternoon my parents were going through all their old LPs and I heard them say The Beach Boys. I lit up and told them I loved The Beach Boys. They were surprised that I knew who the Beach Boys were and immediately put the album on. As soon as a song would start I’d respond with, “That’s not The Beach Boys” and so they’d move the needle to the next track. This went on for the entire album and I stood by my statement that it was not The Beach Boys since there was no Kokomo.
1991 – 2 Legit 2 Quit – MC Hammer
MC Hammer burst onto the music scene with Can’t Touch This back in 1990, but it was his follow up hit, 2 Legit 2 Quit that caught my attention. 2 Legit 2 Quit felt epic and for this first grader, I was all over it. It led to me getting my first ever cassette tape and I can remember listening to it over and over on my parent’s stereo system while lying on their waterbed.
1992 – Jump – Kriss/Kross
MC Hammer opened my eyes to an emerging urban rap scene and being a child, there was no hotter group than child rap group Kriss/Kross. They inspired me to put my jacket on backwards while at school (it’s incredibly uncomfortable BTW) and they became the second cassette tape I ever owned. My parents divorced around this time and my Kriss/Kross tape accompanied me on awkward family vacations and provided music for my first of many school changes.
1992 – End of the Road – Boys II Men
In 1992, Eddie Murphy’s Boomerang came out. It was a raunchy sex comedy that somehow I managed to see. I fell in love with the film and the soundtrack and I just about wore out the cassette tape. The soundtrack was full of great artists like PM Dawn, Babyface, and A Tribe Called Quest, but it was Boys II Men that caught my ear. End of the Road is still my favorite Boys II Men song.
1993 – Simply The Best – Tina Turner and Some Girls Do – Sawyer Brown
My parents divorced around 1993 and for around six or eight months I lived with my mom in a tiny duplex. I can’t be sure all of what my mom was feeling and going through, but she listened to these two songs on a loop on our massive stereo system. Of course, this was 1993, so when I saw on a loop, I mean she’d listen to the song the once it was over, she’d stop it, rewind the tape, and hit play again. I’m not kidding when I heard both of these songs played back-to-back a dozen or two times each time she felt like listening to music.
1995 – I Wish – Skee-Lo
In 1995, I moved to Orlando, Florida, and I’ll never forgetting listening to my Walkman and hearing I Wish for the first time while driving onto the base we were going to be living on. I Wish was a catchy song that got quite a bit of play that summer and I remember hearing it all over the base in places like The Exchange and the barber shop.
1995 – Too Much Love Will Kill You – Queen
Both my mom and Wayne’s World introduced me to Queen in the 90’s, and they quickly became one of my all-time favorite bands. I listened to so much Queen in the 90’s, I rarely listen to Queen now because quite frankly, I think I’ve exhausted myself on their music. I remember sitting at the beauty salon with my grandmother in Orlando where I lived and being bored out of my mind. I decided to walk over to the next shopping center and visit a music store. This music store was like most music stores in the 90’s, it was full of cassettes and CDs and was really overpriced. It was one of those places that charged $17.99 for pretty much anything in the store.
I stumbled upon a new Queen album called Made in Heaven, which was the first Queen album released after Freddie Mercury’s death. On this album was a song originally recorded in 1988 but then re-recorded in 1995 called Too Much Love Will Kill You. It wasn’t a traditional Queen song, but it was a good song nonetheless. Once my grandma finished getting her hair cut, she swung by and bought me the single for Too Much Love Will Kill You.
1996 – Songbird – Kenny G
My dad loved this song. Not too unlike my mom a few years later, he’d listen to this song on a loop, luckily CDs were around by this point in time which made it a little less annoying.
1999 – Talk Dirty to Me – Poison
In 1999, VH1 aired Poison Behind the Music and I fell in love with the band. For five to six years, Poison was my favorite band of all-time. I’m not sure if it was the awesome story that VH1 told or finally putting faces to the great music that I liked, but something just clicked. I still like Poison, but I don’t listen to them nearly as much as I did. That Best of Poison 1986-1996 CD was probably the CD I listened to the most of during my entire life. This song and time period is what launched me into my interest in 80’s metal/hair bands and that dominated the music I listened to for years to come.
2001 – Heaven is a Half-Pipe – OPM
By the year 2000, it was already becoming difficult to find non pop music videos on MTV. Usually you’d have to watch sometime after midnight before any blocks of music videos would begin. I would set my VCR to record these blocks and find hidden gems, like Heaven is a Half-Pipe.
It was 2000, Tony Hawk video games were ruling the world and the X-Games were the hottest sport on TV, so skateboarding was everywhere. This simple, and even goofy song came out at a perfect time and it’s catchy chorus could keep you signing for hours. Even now I have a hard time getting the song out of my head, should it get in there. My brother and I would go around singing Heaven is a Half-Pipe all the time, and I even ripped the song of my Xbox hard drive so I could listen to it while playing Tony Hawk.
2001 – I Just Want You – Ozzy Osbourne
We all go through these awkward growing years where we develop a social life, relationships, and all that fun stuff. I didn’t really go through this in high school, but it did blossom once I finished high school and was working full-time. My love of 80’s metal had continued to evolve and I found myself listening to a lot of Ozzy at that time which was around 2001. Unlike today where you have YouTube and song previews, you had to go in blind when buying albums and I picked up The Ozzman Cometh and discovered all sorts of great Ozzy songs I’d never heard. One of the songs that really appealed to me the most was I Just Want You, and this CD was in my car during all my lunch dates, trips to the movies, and general hanging out. I developed my first real crush around this time and all that teenage angst and confusing feelings emerged and I had Ozzy there to channel my emotions and keep me company.
2001- Crash Into Me – Dave Matthews
I would never call myself a Dave Matthews fan, but I enjoy some of his songs. Crash Into Me is the one I remember most fondly, not because of its quality, but because it was played on a loop while working at Blockbuster. It was one of the many music video that played as part of our hour long video package, so I got used to hearing it quite a bit. Its cemented in my mind as one of the songs that immediately takes me back to the dusty shelves of Blockbuster and reminds me of my late teens/early twenties.
2002 – Ignition (Remix) – R. Kelly
After leaving Blockbuster, I worked for an IT company on the Navy base. It was a decent job where I met some really cool people, including one guy named Tom, who became a mentor to me. He was seven or eight years older than me and taught me tons about working out and women. He also introduced me to some new music that was outside of the mostly 80’s metal that I listened to. One of those songs was R. Kelly’s Ignition Remix. This song really defines my time working on base and the beginning few months of my first real relationship.
2003 – Superman – Eminem
In my eyes Eminem was at his peak in 2002, and Superman was one of those “Wow, I can’t believe he went there” songs. It was the type of song you’d listen to after a breakup or if you were truly angry with a girl. I had a mini-breakup with my then girlfriend and I’ll never forget going home and just listening to this on a loop. If there is one thing Eminem does well is channel anger for his listeners.
2003 – Sometimes I Feel Like Screaming – Deep Purple
I have a love/hate relationship with this song. I love the title and I love how the song begins, but once it shifts into a heavier rock song I begin to dislike it. Still, I listened to this song because of the title. I think it’s one of those things we can all relate to. But lyrically and everything else about the song relate to me in absolutely no way. Despite all this, I listened to this song a bunch in 2002-2003 and it was one of the songs that accompanied me on my drive to the Navy College where I took classes. Anytime I hear it, I instantly think back to driving on the road right in front of the new Navy College building in Millington, Tennessee.
2003 – Cherry Pie – Warrant
Okay, this is by far the most cringe entry on this list. In 2003, I was nineteen or twenty and just gotten my 1994 Mazda Miata. It was red with white racing stripes and I loved that little car. I also thought I was the shit in it. I lost a ton of weight and was living my best life, which usually consisted with the top being down and blasting my favorite music which a lot of times included Cherry Pie by Warrant.
2004 – The End Has Come – Ben Moody featuring Jason Miller and Jason “Gong” Jones
In the early 2000’s, I’d gotten back into comics in a big way. We were on a cusp of some big time comic book movies with X-Men and Spider-man leading the way. I was all about any and all comic book movies, and the upcoming Punisher adaptation was one of my most anticipated films of 2004. It wasn’t the most faithful adaptation but it was a damn good movie, and I really enjoyed the soundtrack. I discovered one song called The End Has Come that really connected with me and I listened to that track hundreds of times over the years. I was going through a lot around this time. My father had begun heavy drinking, I got booted out of my house, and I was hanging on by a thread. This song played through those late night drives to clear my mind that I so often took.
2005 – Cells – The Servant
In late 2004/early 2005, the first trailer was released for Robert Rodriguez’s Sin City. It featured an amazing instrumental song that I discovered online was sampled from a song called Cells by a small British band named The Servant. I quickly sought out their album and then every other piece of music by them that I could find. I fell in love with The Servant hard and looking back they are probably one of my all-time favorite bands. I don’t think I heard a song that I didn’t like by them, and for years I listened to their music almost on a loop. Like some of the other music on this list, I might have overplayed it a little and rarely listen to it now.
Still, when I think back to going to college and my final days in Memphis, I can’t help but think about listening to The Servant. I even brought a song in to have my Music Appreciation class listen to.
2006 – Something to Say – Kane
2005-2005 is when I discovered Buffy The Vampire Slayer. I went all in on learning everything I could about the show and its spin-off Angel. One of the things I learned as that Christian Kane, who portrayed Lindsay on Angel, had a band called Kane. I searched for their songs online and found a great song called Carolina Rain. It was a nice country song that I digged. But then I downloaded a handful of rock songs that were obviously not by his band. There is also a Dutch band named Kane and they had a song called Something to Say I absolutely loved. It became one of those songs I just about wore out I listened to it so much.
This song really defines the time that I worked at GameStop. I was nerding out about Buffy most days and listening to Kane on my hour long drive to the mall.
2009 – A Favor House Atlantic – Coheed and Cambria
I still don’t know if I like Coheed and Cambria. They were an indie group that had a few hits around 2008 and then fizzled away. I remember discovering two songs of theirs I liked, A Favor Hour Atlantic and Feathers, but I really couldn’t stand any of their other music. I was listening to this song quite a lot in May of 2008 which was during a very difficult time. The movie theater I worked had just been purchased by Regal Entertainment and everything went to hell overnight. Mismanagement and utter incompetency reigned and we were left working crazy hours into the early morning trying to keep the building up and running the opening weekend of Iron Man. Coheed and Cambria was my soundtrack to this chaos and now it’s one of those songs that doesn’t really bring back good memories.
2009 – Gold Digger, Take a Bow, Alone, No Air – Glee
In 2009, I decided to give Hulu a try. I signed up for a free trial and was disappointed with their selection of TV shows. I noticed a new show called Glee on there which had just aired its fourth episode. I decided to turn it on for a few minutes and see what it was all about. Four episodes later, I was obsessed and I had to walk into work the next day and admit that I had just watched the least masculine show I could think of to my music lover boss, who I knew if he gave the show a chance he’d love. After some jokes, he did give Glee a shot and fell in love with the show like me, which lasted all of the first season and then the show went to hell. It was hard to pick just one song, so I decided to list several, because these song were in endless rotation on my mp3 player at that time.
2010 – Coastline Journey – Mishka
Around 2009-2010, I decided a little change of pace in my life would be a good thing. I wanted things to slow down a bit and I started following Matthew McConaughey’s guide to life, just keep living (JK Livin). This led me into discovering a Canadian reggae artist named Mishka that Matthew McCaonughey had signed to his JK Livin record label. The relaxing Caribbean beats soothed my soul and gave me something new and different to listen to. I even went to a couple of Mishka’s concerts. Mishka was the backbone of a new relaxed version of myself, one that I desperately need to get back in touch with.
2012 – War – Poets of the Fall
My all-time favorite video game is Alan Wake. It’s the perfect combination of third person shooter, Stephen King, and The Twilight Zone. I love the atmosphere, the insanity, and the music. One of my favorite moments of the game occurs inside a shed when a radio is playing a song called War by Poets of the Fallen. It’s so unexpecting to hear music with lyrics, it’s almost as startling as when Jose Gonzalez’s Far Away begins in Red Dead Redemption.
Thanks to Alan Wake, I discovered Poets of the Fallen and enjoy a lot of their music. War is by far my favorite song of theirs, and it’s one of my go to “pick me ups” songs.
2013 – Wagon Wheel – Darius Rucker
I was driving home from Tennessee the first time I heard Wagon Wheel. It was such a fun and upbeat song, it instantly stuck in my head. Little did I know all the radio stations, country and pop would play this song to death over the next six months. Still, it defined a moment in my life where I just listened to the hell out of it.
2013 – Oats in the Water – Ben Howard / Last Pale Light in the West – Ben Nichols
Both of these songs I heard while watching The Walking Dead, somewhere around the season with The Governor. They were simple folk songs that just spoke to me. I listened to both songs on a loop and eventually discovered other alternative country artists that I still listen to often.
2015 – Annabelle – The Duhks
Speaking of folk/alternative country artists, The Duhks did an amazing rendition of Annabelle for the tv show Hell on Wheels. The song was cut to a beautiful montage and I knew I had to find it. Annabelle is one of those songs I’ve yet to tire of and I listen to it at monthly, if not several times a month on one of my western playlists.
2017 – Return to Innocence – Enigma
One of my favorite infomercials of the 90’s was for Pure Moods, a collection of new age music. The commercial was iconic and I loved a lot of the songs I heard on it but I never got my hands on the actual album until 2017 when I ran across it at a thrift store. I actually managed to find the second and third albums as well and I really enjoyed this time period where I listened to relaxing music and spent my weekends thrifting.
2018 – Writings on the Wall – Sam Smith
I hated this song. I hated it with a passion, but I still put it in my James Bond mix on Google Music and after a few listens, I started to appreciate it. Then that appreciation grew and I started to love it. I spent a lot of time driving and listening to this song in 2018. I was going through buying a house and then a divorce and I spent a lot of time driving between work, my mom’s, and a friend’s house while listening to this song.
2018 – Bridges Burn – Paul Otten
Bridges Burn is a song that I first heard playing on an episode of Longmire. It’s strange how some songs really connect with a person and Bridges Burn is one of those songs that I instantly loved. It’s probably in my top three songs of all-time and every time I hear it, it feels new and fresh which is shocking considering that I’ve listened to it at least a hundred times.
2019 – If Only – Maria Taylor, Conor Oberst
In January of 2019, I discovered the TV show This is Us and that first season had an amazing soundtrack. My favorite song from the first season was If Only and this became a song I jammed out to a lot. I remember driving and listening to it on a loop because for some reason it just really spoke to me at that moment in my life.
2019 – The Comeback Kid – The Midnight
I heard this song in early 2019 and I swore it would be my anthem for the year and it was. The lyrics of this song really spoke to me as I was coming off a divorce, some awkward friendships, a weird living arrangement and so on. I knew I had to get my crap together and I’d end 2019 in a much better place than 2018 and I did. I found myself listening to this song quite often as I explored the subgenre of outrun/synthwave music and it still perks me up when I hear it.
2020 – Middle of Nowhere – Hot Hot Heat
This is a song I just recently discovered on a Spotify playlist made up of the songs featured in the TV show Psych. It’s catchy, fun, and reminds me of the mid 2000’s. It was my song of 2020 and still whenever I’m in a mood it picks me up.
2020 - Blinding Lights - The Weekend
2020 was such a bummer of a year, but Blinding Lights was always there to pep me up. It sounded like it was straight out of the 80's and really made me feel good while I listened to it. The first time I heard it, I mentioned to my wife that we needed more music that sounds like this. Sadly, it didn't bring back an 80's renaissance in music.
2021 - Only Children - Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit
Only Children is one of the most beautiful songs I've ever heard. It's haunting and catchy and seemed to represent in tone, much of what I was feeling in the beginning of 2021. My only complaint is the song is not long enough, and I was forced to listen to it on a loop over and over again.
2021 - New Disaster - Barenaked Ladies
Over the years, life has become scary, or at least that's what the the internet and media seem to tell you. Everything is horrible, life is coming to an end at any moment, and we should all hide in fear. BNL poke fun at this concept and I love it. It reminds me of their song Odd's Are and I like a good reminder that life is not as bad as everyone would like you to believe it is.
2022 - Civilian - Wye Oak
I'm still not sure where I heard this song, maybe an episode of Longmire? Either way, its a song that has lived on my western/folk playlist and in 2022 I played the hell out of it. I love the vocals, the interesting mix, and just the genre bending sound.
2022 - Keep the Wolves Away - Uncle Lucious
I believe this song became popular in 2020, but I just discovered in 2022. It's a solid folk song with a decent message and I love the title. I think we've all been there before.
2022 - Slow Down - Paul Cauthen
I have no idea what this song is. It's countryish... I mean, the artist does like country rap (which is by far the most horrible subgenre of music on Earth), but I just dig it. The song just needs to be longer.
2023 - Anything, Anything - Dramarama
In 2023, I rewatched all of the Nightmare on Elm Street movies and Anything, Anything was featured in Part IV. I remember loving the scene it was used in, and after watching it, I had to find the song and it became my go to song of the year. I wish I had statistics on how many times I listened to it, because it had to be in the the hundreds. I'd just put it on for half an hour in a loop or more. There is just something about the tone and angst that feels me with joy.
2023 - White Jeans and The Sensation - The Night Flight Orchestra
I ran across The Night Flight Orchestra as I researched bands with an 80's sound in 2023 after watching Peacemaker. I fell down this rabbit hole of European bands who were keeping 80's glam alive, and I discovered so many great artists. These two songs were featured in heavy rotation, especially when I was working out.
2023- Mary on a Cross - Chez Kane
Another modern musician with an 80's song, Chez Kane's cover of Ghost's Mary on a Cross became one of my favorite songs in 2023.
2023 - Watch the Fire - W.E.T
And yet another group with 80's influence, W.E.T's Watch the Fire is just the perfect song for all ocassions. I need to chill out, it works. I need to get pumped up, it works. I love it!
2023 - One More Time - Blink 182
I wouldn't say I'm the biggest Blink 182 fan, in fact, when Blink 182 hit the scene I was jamming out to 80's music and hating on all popular music. Luckily, as I've gotten older, I've embraced that era of pop-punk and truly enjoy the music of my high school years.
I'm not sure how I ran across One More Time, but I was listening to it when I created this blog. It's nostalgic, and I just appreciate it so much.
2024 - Final Days - Michael Kiwanuka
I discovered this song on the Invincible soundtrack and it just spoke to me. It's so unlike the type of music I typically listen to, but quickly became a song I listened to at work when dealing with difficult customers.
I know for a fact I’ll never be happy with this post. There will always be songs that I’ve forgotten about and that drives me nuts. But, I guess this is as good as its gonna get it. I’ve had this post in draft status for several years. I’m glad to see if finally, somewhat done. I'll continue to update it as time goes on.
That’s All For Today, Folks
Thanks again for being here.





