You never know who will pick up on the vibes of the Great Awakening, so treat everyone like potential frens
(media.greatawakening.win)
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I listen to old music, meaning from the 70s on back to the 20s and 30s. There's a ton of interesting stuff from back then. You can find a lot on YouTube, and the really old stuff can be downloaded free from Archive.org and a few other places on the internet. Or you can buy an old stereo and pick up some old records at yard sales and thrift stores.
I have everything on the computer, so I can set up huge playlists of random music, almost like having my own personal radio station. It is very calming to listen to older music.
Music is powerful for me as well. I'm old enough to have been "shook" when I realized the public pool was playing #1 hits from my high school days on the Classics station. I find myself switching my Sonos to the Jazz, Escape, and Watercolors channels vs the Rock stations. (Watercolors hosts are mouthpieces for everything 'woke', so that gets less and less time w/me). My MIL passed very unexpectedly in early 2020...she loved John Denver. My husband and I recently went to an America concert. I was thinking about how my MIL would have enjoyed this w/us, when the preconcert stream of 70's music broke into playing JD's "You Fill Up My Senses". I knew she was there with us and had to leave my seat for some private tears.
I didn't care for America, as songs like "Horse With No Name" seemed to go on for way too long without a melody.
On my radio, the John Denver song sounded like "You Fill Up My Fences," and I was puzzled. :)
I have all the records from the 70s on my computer, so I can make my own playlists and play them whenever I like. I collect everything, so I also have all the hits from 1890 to a year or two ago.
I agree w/the sentiment of "A Horse w/No Name"...not my favorite tune of the band and in general, I actually much prefer Gerry Beckley's voice over Dewey Bunnell's. They sounded incredible for being on the scene for 50+ years. 😄 @ "You Fill Up My Fences"!
That song ranks up there with "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald" as being way, way too long, with a super repetitive tune.