Wednesday, April 1, 2026

IWSG Day: Wednesday, April 1. 2026 ~ A Playlist Just for Me.

    




It's the first Wednesday of the month,
the day that members of the
Insecure Writer's Support Group
share their writing struggles
and writing successes
and offer their encouragement
and support to fellow writers.






To visit the IWSG website, click here.

To become a member of the IWSG, click here.

Our wonderful co-hosts who are volunteering today,
along with IWSG Founder Alex J. Cavanaugh are 

Stop by their posts and thank them for hosting.
 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Every month the IWSG announces a question that members can answer
with advice, insight, a personal experience, or a story in their IWSG posts.

Or, the question can inspire members
if they aren't sure what to write about on IWSG Day.

Remember the question is optional.

This month's optional question is: 
If you have a playlist (or could put one together) that either gets you in the groove to write or fits with one of your books, what is it? What type of music or what songs?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Happy April Fool's Day, Everyone! 
I hope that you have had a happy, healthy, and fulfilling March!
This used to be such a fun day for me as a second and/or third grade teacher.
I'd be pulling pranks on my kiddos, and they'd be pulling pranks on me.

This year, not so much.
Terry and I are both flat with bad colds,
and that's no April Fool's Day joke.
With the wild, windy, and wet weather in Hawaii, colds hitting many people,
and the stress of a very long day flying home, some nasty bug got us.
So be it.  I've never missed an IWSG Day post.

Last Glimpse of Hawaii This Time ~ The Beautiful Island of Molokai
Hawaii, USA
March 24, 2026
© M. Louise (MacBeath) Barbour/Fundy Blue. All Rights Reserved

If I could zip out right now and order two steaming bowls of Nikutama
at Marugame Udon In Waikiki, I'd be there in a flash.
This soothing dish, with its handcrafted udon, savory simmered beef, sweet onions,
soft-boiled egg, scallions, tempura flakes, and signature Kake-dashi broth,
would fill and comfort us.  I can smell its delectable aroma right now!
Next year in Waikiki, without a cold, for sure.
One day I'll master eating slippery udon noodles with chopsticks. 😂

Delectable Nikutama at Marugame Udon
Waikiki, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA
February 10, 2025
© M. Louise (MacBeath) Barbour/Fundy Blue. All Rights Reserved

This month's question immediately makes me think of my brother-in-law Martin
who surely is the PlayList Master with a list for any artist, genre, theme, or occasion.
His winter home in Calgary and summer home in Smith's Cove are wired for music.
It would be shocking to visit his (and Donnie's) home and not hear music ~ 
well, except for when the Toronto Blue Jays or Raptors are playing.

The photo below is a favorite of mine.
The one thing Martin loves above all is family,
and family encompasses extended blood and non blood members.
Assorted "family" members are often gathered at my sister Donnie and Martin's home.
We like to do things in herds. 😂
Here we are watching our niece Natalie's fiancé playing baseball for Nova Scotia.
After the game we went outside to a fire pit with a Martin playlist surrounding us.

Cheering On Jake and Nova Scotia
Center and Clockwise:  Martin, Me, Krista, Olivia, Bertie, Natalie, Peter, and Dean
Smith's Cove, Nova Scotia, Canada
August 4, 2018
© M. Louise (MacBeath) Barbour/Fundy Blue. All Rights Reserved

I, unlike Martin, never assembled playlists,
but music has been a constant throughout my life,
especially when I'm writing, studying, or working with photos.
I went through a number of music phases in my life:
listening to my parents' music,
listening to the radio,
listening to records I bought on a record player, 
listening to music in all kinds of formats,
and finding the ultimate source for music.

When I grew up, I listened to my parents' choices on the radio,
mostly CFCY (630 AM), Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, 
known as "The Friendly Voice of the Maritimes."
Its owners launched CFCY-TV on July 1, 1956, and television arrived in P.E.I.,
not that we had one. 

I can remember a DJ saying, "Step right up to the mic and sing, Elvis."
I imagined all the singers and groups sitting in a circle around the mic
and coming up to the microphone when the DJ called on them to perform. 😂
Okay, I was sooo little my ambition was to grow up and marry Prince Charles.
Dodged a bullet there, whew!
When my parents had a little money to spare for buying records, 
I started listening to their music:  Elvis, Satchmo, Big Band, and bagpipes.

The Great Satchmo ~ Louis Armstrong
Amsterdam, Netherlands, 1955
Wikimedia ~ Herbert Behrens / Anefo ~ License




Mom and Dad Dancing at Acadia University
Acadia University, Wolfville, Nova Scotia, Canada
1946 or 1947
© M. Louise (MacBeath) Barbour/Fundy Blue. All Rights Reserved

I began listening to my own music when we moved North into isolation in 1961.
My dad gave me his well-used blue transistor radio,
and this radio was my constant companion until I left university.

By the gift of atmospheric skip, I was able to receive WLS Chicago (890 AM)
during the night in Lansdowne House inland from James Bay in Northern Ontario.
I listened to their star DJ Dick Biondi spin platters throughout the early Sixties
wherever I was living in the North.
Biondi introduced me to such greats as the Moody Blues,
the Four Seasons, Chubby Checker, and the Beatles. 

Btw, Biondi is considered the first American DJ to have played the Beatles on the radio.
He did so in February 1963 on Chicago's WLS 890 AM,
playing their song "Please Please Me."

Iconic American Disc Jockey Dick Biondi

I began choosing my own music when I was 12 and Dad gave me his old record player.
Elvis Presley's "Blue Hawaii" was the first album I bought.
I had to put it on layaway at the drug store until I could earn enough money to buy it.
For almost 60 years I bought the music I loved in whatever format it existed in,
and I played it over and over and over.

My First Album

Then, when the Pandemic hit, I discovered YouTube Music on my computer.
I no longer bother with all the forms of recorded music that stuff my house.
I listen to YouTube music ~ daily and a lot.  
I'm listening to it now as I write this.

YouTube made me a ranked Recap of my Top 100 most played music videos in 2025
(music videos because I love to see the artists perform).
Wow!  I have a personal playlist, and it continues beyond 100 videos if I get that far.
I have.  😂
  
I've played it countless times since YouTube compiled it in early January.
I've been really busy, and it's so easy and pleasing
to play my Recap rather than choose anything.

You can listen to it too:

Click on Sia - Breathe Me (Cover by Jonathan Roy) and the videos will start.
The list is eclectic and a little heavy on Teddy Swims,
but if you'd like to see or hear my playlist that gets me in the groove to write,
to do almost anything, feel free to check it out.

If you are also a member of our Facebook Group,
I invite you to visit and to provide a link to your IWSG post. 
Facebook members are invited to answer our April question too.

Take care!



Till next time ~
Fundy Blue

Standing Into Danger https://selkiegrey4.blogspot.com
Copyright ©2026 – All rights reserved.

My next post will be Friday, April 10th. 🤞 



Note:  "Atmospheric "skip" (skywave propagation) allows AM radio signals to travel hundreds or thousands of miles at night by reflecting off the ionosphere. During the day, the sun creates the D layer, which absorbs AM signals, restricting range to a "ground wave". At night, the D layer vanishes, allowing signals to bounce off higher layers, creating long-distance reception often heard as distant, fading stations."
(Google AI Assistant).

Skywave, Ground Wave, Skip Zone and Skip Distance – Electronics Technician – Volume 7 – Figure 1-8 – Larry D. Simmons Floyd L. Ace II (Public domain)


Just so you know, I monitor my comments before publishing them.  This means your comment won't appear immediately.  I will not publish mean spirited or commercial comments.     

 

32 comments:

  1. Dear friend Louise 🥰
    I really enjoyed your sharing today, I could relate to part when you were listening music that your parents would love to hear. And I could relate to part where your father gifted you his used radio which accompanied you until you left the university. I can never imagine my life without music because radio was ruling power in our household and my parents would love to tune different programs from morning till night,music was most played part of it and this is how music first came to my life . For me it’s one of the most powerful way to connect myself and nature !
    I have great admiration for all types of arts that reflect human ‘s soul side and music is base of it in my opinion.
    I will check out your playlist for sure.
    Stay blessed dear friend,wishing you two health peace and happiness 🙏♥️🫂

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    1. Hi, Baili! Your comment is wonderful, as always. I loved hearing how your parents played the radio all day long and brought music into your life. Music is deeply engrained in human beings, and I think we sang before we talked. Sending you much love and blessings to you and the people you love! 🌺❤️🌺

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  2. ...Louise, I wish you an Awesome April. You now another year of Hawaii memories, more next year???

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    1. Hey, Tom! We have our reservations for next year! I think it's funny, maybe prescient, that the first record I bought was "Blue Hawaii." Have a great day, my friend. Aloha! 🌺🌺❤️🌺

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  3. I'm sorry that you and Terry are sick. I hope you feel better soon. That soup looks good minus the meat. I remember when we used to put things on layaway. It must have been exciting when you got that album out of layaway that you were saving for as a kid.

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    1. Hi, Natalie! I hope all is well with you! Getting that album out of layaway was a thrill I'll never forget. Have fun visiting around today! 🌺❤️🌺

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  4. Sorry you are both sick. That dish would definitely make you feel better.
    I have a playlist on YouTube as well. Cool to have visuals with the music.

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    1. Thanks, Alex! I am highly visual, Alex, and watching the artists perform adds a higher dimension of pleasure for me. I think it's cool that you have a a playlist on YouTube too. Happy IWSG Day! 🌺❤️🌺

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  5. Oh, I enjoyed this post, Louise! Music has always been a huge part of my life too, and I also have very eclectic musical tastes . . . including bagpipes! But your line that gave me the biggest smile is -- "my ambition was to grow up and marry Prince Charles.
    Dodged a bullet there, whew!" Hahahaha! I hope your cold is gone soon.

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    1. Hi, Debra! I love that you enjoy bagpipes! I really wanted to be a princess. Now it is the last thing I'd want to be. My cold is miserable, but I am being distracted from it by watching the Artemis II launch, which includes Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen. I can't believe it's been so long since we went to the moon. I want to live a long time, so I can see more of what happens in space. 😂 Have an awesome rest of the week! 🌺❤️🌺

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  6. Sorry you are down with a cold. I supposed everyone stayed inside too much during all that rain and the germs got passed around. And it figures that your first record album was Elvis' "Blue Hawaii." Did you know then you'd spend so much time there? Safe travels home!

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    Replies
    1. Thanks, Jeff! Terry and I are still laying low, but I'm glad that we're home and in a bigger space. 😂 I was just commenting to Tom that it was funny, maybe prescient, that the first record I bought was "Blue Hawaii." Back then I had no idea that I would spend so much time on these beautiful islands. I've been fascinated by Hawaii as long as I can remember. Then came "Hawaii Five-O" and Geology 100 with Hawaiian volcanoes and the controversial continental drift theory. Then, when I was 25, my mother said, "Oh, I knew a volcanologist years ago." What??? That was Tom Jaggar who founded the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory. His sister was my Mom's mentor. It's a crazy world! 😂 All the best to you! 🌺❤️🌺

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  7. YouTube made you a playlist... LOL! I have made a few of my own throughout the years, but they always get abandoned as technology advances. Crazy, right? I remember recording songs off the radio and calling in to make special requests so I could get the tape just right. Haha! Whew. That was a different lifetime.

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    1. Happy IWSG Day, Crystal! It was hard to keep up with all the technology advances over the years. I wasn't joking when I said my home was stuffed. I was contemplating how to get rid of it all, and then I read physical music is in demand. Maybe I can sell some! 😂. I'm enjoying some good cheese right now. 😂 Have a great rest of the week!

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  8. Really sorry you're sick. No way to come home from vacation.

    I forget the Moody Blues are that old!

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    Replies
    1. Thanks, Diane! Sick is definitely not the way to come home. But it's great to be home, even as I miss Hawaii. The Moody Blues is passing into history now with only Justin Hayward still alive. One of the best groups EVER. Have a Happy Easter weekend! 🌺❤️🌺

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  9. Aww, I hope you both feel better soon.
    Your music mentions remind me of when I fell in love with Bobby Vinton. I was seven years old ;-) Happy April!

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    1. Happy April, Diedre! Oh yes, Bobby Vinton and "Blue Velvet." Such good memories! All the best to you! 🌺❤️🌺

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  10. Sorry that you are sick! That soup looks delicious.

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    1. Thanks, Jenny! That soup is delicious. Have a great week and fun visits today. 🌺❤️🌺

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  11. I'm so sorry you both have colds. It sounds just miserable. A bad homecoming, but I'm sure it's good to be home (even though you might not be able to have that delicious looking Hawaiian dinner!)

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    1. Thanks, Jeanie! Fortunately I've learned not to have my calendar crammed when I return home after a trip. And home is very, very good! I hope all is well with you and Rick. Happy Easter! 🌺❤️🌺

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  12. What a fabulous post, ya know except the part that you two are sick. I'm so sorry for that. The however is brilliant. Music has always been apart of my life too. My dad made sure that all of us kids played an instrument and always a phonograph, then a record player and then a stereo system. The music was varied from opera, to rock. Hope you are feeling better, wishing you a happy April. For me it has to be better than March. LOL

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    1. I hope you have wonderfully healing April, Nicole! You've been through way too much! I wish I had learned to play an instrument, but we lived in places where that opportunity wasn't available at the time I would have been learning. That's okay. I've had more than enough to keep me busy throughout my life. 😂 Hugs and love to you. 🌺❤️🌺

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  13. Even through the haze of a rough cold, your memories—woven with voices like Elvis Presley and the early spins of The Beatles—carry a warmth that feels as comforting as a bowl from Marugame Udon Waikiki.

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    1. You are magical, Roentare! I love the way you spin words! All the best to you! 🌺❤️🌺

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  14. Hey! I love the Playlist that YouTube has for me. It always includes one of my son's songs April is my birthday month so always nice to see it coming round!

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    1. Of course you have your son's music on your YouTube playlist, Kay! I would expect nothingness from you. 😂. Have an awesome birthday month! 🌺❤️🌺

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  15. I clicked on the link, but nadda showed up for me. It's as blank as blank can be. Guess no songs want to play. Or maybe you need some tips from Martin lol

    Ugg to the germs. Nothing like those germ tubes to get you sick as you fly through the air. Hopefully they flee soon enough. Kiddos are germy too, so I've been hiding haha

    The way we appreciate music sure changes indeed. I mostly have everything one a usb and use it in the car. When driving all day for work, keeps me company. Plus, I wrote a few for the kids and they get me to play them whenever they hop on in. Up to 409 now thanks to you with 53 more written to convert to song.

    Good you didn't follow your childhood Charles dream too lol

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  16. The Nikutama looks delicious!
    I'm currently listening to metal songs turned full instrumental with a violin lead; so cool!
    Ronel visiting for IWSG day Find Your Unicorn Space

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  17. A playlist? Well, the first thing that springs to mind is the incomparable

    Tina Turner

    with ‘Nutbush City Limits’. But of course there were other great artists who followed, such as Bob Marley with his reggae. And of course the Rolling Stones... or Pink Floyd.

    Best wishes for health. And happy Easter too.

     (\(\
     ( -.-)
     o_(")(")

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  18. Dear Louise,
    I enjoyed reading your musical memories (mmmm, and the food photo 😋). My husband also has all sorts of playlists, by the way—and I have two: a "general" one with my favorite music and one for exercise that motivates me to jump, run, and pedal fast on my bike 😅
    Really? You wanted to marry Prince Charles? I always thought he was way too ugly for a prince 😁 and couldn't understand Diana (who was born in the same year as me) at all... Poor thing.
    I hope you're all feeling better now!
    Happy Easter 🌸🐣🐇🪺🐰 - hugs & all the best from Austria,
    Traude

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Thank you for your comments! I appreciate them very much.