Glow Up
This 1964 song was recorded in one take and produced in under 15 minutes, and In 100 years this song will still be viewed as perfect.
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This song was one of the most iconic tracks of the 1970s, yet in 2026, itโs all but forgotten by most.
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This is one of the greatest songs ever written by anyone, at any time.
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This song was recorded in 1955, today it is considered as one of the best songs ever! ๐
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My husband dropped divorce papers on the kitchen counter and said, โIโm taking everything. The house. The money. Even the kids.โ So I signed before he could finish, let him celebrate for two full weeks, and stayed quiet while he told everyone he had already wonโbecause there was one thing he forgot to check before walking out of my life.
The pen barely made a sound when I signed.
Just a soft scratch against the paper.
But in that kitchen, on that humid Indiana night, with grilled chicken cooling on the stove and the ceiling fan clicking like it was counting down, that tiny sound felt louder than anything Scott had said.
The counter was sticky from spilled sweet tea. The manila folder smelled like printer ink and his cologne.
He had mistaken silence for surrender.
Scott stopped smiling.
โYou did what?โ he asked.
I finished writing my name, capped the pen, and slid the divorce papers back across the counter like I was returning a receipt.
โYou heard me,โ I said.
For a second, he looked almost disappointed.
Not hurt.
Not guilty.
Disappointed.
He had walked in expecting trembling hands, begging, maybe me crying hard enough that Ben would come in from the den and Ellie would creep halfway down the stairs.
Instead, I gave him exactly what he thought he wanted.
And somehow, that scared him more than anger would have.
It was 10:41 p.m. on a late August Thursday. Ben was in the den tapping his game controller too fast, pretending not to listen. Ellie was upstairs with headphones on, which meant she had probably heard every word.
Scott still wore that navy blazer he lovedโthe one he paired with clean sneakers whenever he wanted to look successful without looking like he had tried too hard.
โIโm done, Dana,โ he said.
No greeting.
No explanation.
Just done.
Then he dropped the folder onto the counter and told me everything was already handled.
The house would be his.
The money would be his.
The business would be his.
Then he leaned closer, lowered his voice, and pressed on the one place he knew could hurt me without leaving a mark.
โIf you fight this, youโll never see the kids again.โ
That was the only moment my body almost betrayed me.
Not over the house.
Not over the accounts.
Not even over the years I had spent making myself smaller so he could feel larger in every room.
The kids.
That meant school pickup lines, lunchboxes, late-night fevers, Benโs sneakers kicked sideways by the back door, Ellie standing at the sink telling me about her day like she didnโt care if I listenedโwhen she absolutely did.
Scott saw my expression change and thought he had won.
That was his second mistake.
His first was thinking I had never been paying attention.
For years, whenever money came up, Scott talked over me. He called it protecting me from stress. At dinners, he would laugh and tell people I handled โhome stuffโ while he handled the real world.
And I would smile.
Because turning every small insult into a war is how women get called dramatic in their own kitchens.
A man can confuse being obeyed with being invisible.
That is how careless men leave paper trails.
I noticed things.
Charges that didnโt match.
Business trips with strange gaps.
Weekend meetings that never appeared on any calendar.
Emails from shared accounts that kept arriving long after he thought he had locked me out.
So when he shoved those papers toward me and said, โIโm taking everything,โ I looked straight at him and said, โFine. Letโs not drag this out.โ
He smirked.
โSmart move,โ he said.
And I signed.
The next morning at 8:15 a.m., while he was probably telling someone I had folded, I drove to Indianapolis with a paper coffee cup cooling in the cupholder and the folder on the passenger seat.
The attorneyโs office was plain and bright, with a small American flag near the reception desk and intake forms clipped neatly together.
My hands stayed steady until she started reading.
The divorce petition.
The proposed property division.
The custody language.
The financial disclosure page Scott had completed like he was writing my life in pencil.
Finally, my attorney looked up.
โYou know this isnโt final, right?โ
I nodded.
That was when her face changed, because Scott had been counting on one thing more than my fear.
He had been counting on me treating his version like the ending.
It wasnโt.
It was the opening move.
For the next two weeks, he celebrated.
A new apartment downtown.
Photos of expensive drinks.
Late dinners.
That smug, easy confidence of a man who believed he had walked away clean.
He told one neighbor I was being โreasonable.โ
He told his brother I had โfinally accepted reality.โ
He told anyone willing to listen that the hard part was over.
And while he was busy enjoying his freedom, I sat on the garage floor after the kids went to bed, surrounded by old tax returns, bank statements, printed account histories, receipts, school forms, and the blue file box he used to mock me for keeping.
The concrete felt cold through my jeans. The garage smelled like cardboard, dust, and old lawn equipment. A half-dead bulb hummed above me while I sorted everything by date, account number, signature, and anything else that made sense.
By midnight, my coffee had gone cold.
By 1:32 a.m., I found the first transfer that didnโt belong.
By 2:06 a.m., I found the second.
Not groceries.
Not gas.
Not tuition.
Money moving quietly through an account Scott had never mentioned at the kitchen table.
I printed what I could.
Photographed what I had to.
Cataloged the pages in the order my attorney told me to keep them, because panic wastes time and paper does not.
By the end of the second week, I had a folder so thick the rubber band snapped when I tried to close it.
Two weeks after Scott walked out, we sat in family court.
The room smelled like floor polish and old coffee. A flag stood near the front. Scott wore the same navy blazer, the same practiced expression, the same little smile that said he still believed the room would understand him better than it understood me.
He took the stand like a man stepping into a meeting he expected to win.
My attorney waited until he finished explaining how responsible he had been with โour assets.โ
Then she stood, opened her folder, and asked him about an account ending in 4821.
Scottโs smile didnโt vanish all at once.
It slipped.
And for the first time since he dropped those papers on my kitchen counter, he looked at me like he finally remembered who had been living in that house with himโฆ
This song was recorded in 1966, today it is considered as one of the best songs ever.
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This song was #1 hit in the 1960s, but now only a few remember it. That drum intro at the start of the sing was definitely way ahead of its time. It's one of my most favorite song intros ever.
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The year before Chris Cornellโs untimely death, the late Soundgarden singer surprised an entire LA audience when he appeared on stage with folk-rock legend Cat Stevens to sing his โ70s hit, โWild World" - and what a performance it was. Watch video on below ๐
One voice. One bittersweet farewell. When he performed this song on television in 1960, it struck a chord with hearts across America. A tender reminder of lost love, it once filled radios and record players everywhere. But now, only a few still remember the sorrow it carried.
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When Marvin Gaye first shared this song, the label didnโt believe it belonged on the radio and tried to hold it back. He stood his ground โ and it ultimately became one of the most important songs of the 20th century.
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