Last week, I was lucky enough to win The Listserve. It's an email list with 22,200 subscribers (and counting - you can subscribe here). Each day a lottery chooses one user to send a 600-word email to the entire list. Here's what I wrote:
My name is Tom, and I'm a fairly  cynical guy. Friends and family always call me a grumpy guy, down in the  dumps, whatever. I brush it off and frown on into the sunset. But  that's fine. Because even beneath it all, I think there's one thing  keeping us all spinning on this ball of water, people and green - music.I'm  a student of history (and most things) and I think music keeps us all  guessing, angling at what's next. That's probably the reason why we  haven't blown ourselves up yet. We love a good story. What happens next?  What's at the end of the rainbow? We'll keep running toward it, pushing  away obstacles and jumping over challenges until we find out. No one  wants to be the guy who writes "The End" when we're having such an  interesting time.
But music is the  way we decorate time and space - art decorates just space, TV and movies  and books decorate just time. It's an invisible force that vitalises us  - much like air - and brings us closer together. In the 17th and 18th  centuries, the Europeans invented waltz music to break down the barriers  between dancers. Instead of dancing side by side, they could now dance  in front of each other. Music may have precipitated the novel idea that  love and marriage is for other reasons than money and prestige. Of  course, this is just my theory. Well, Shakespeare might back me up.
Though  we're not a ritualistic society. Well, not really. Even so, our rites  of passage are marked with music. Christenings, graduations, weddings,  you name it - there's songs to commemorate them, across every culture.  Music is everywhere. After the shocking tragedy in Orlando the other  day, people came together to grieve...and sing. It's a release like no  other. We cannot change the past but we can make it that little bit  better with music.
People gather together to see art and watch  films, but they aren't sharing the experience like music. We sit on  seats divided by armrests or clump together and walk on to the next  painting. I have yet to talk to someone who made a lifelong friend  watching a film or proceeding past a bunch of paintings. I can  recall sitting on a bench at high school, earbuds lodged way too far in  when a fellow traveller walked past and asked what I was listening to. I  told him it was Slipknot (don't judge - I was 13 at the time...I still  love heavy metal though) and I offered him an earbud. (Imagine doing  that now!) 
He plucked it in, nodded away for a while and we got  talking. We talked about other bands that were hot at the time (Blink  182! The Offspring!) and we've been friends ever since. Music is the  neverending story. I think it keeps us grounded, and hanging on to this  sometimes awful, sometimes beautiful place we call home.
So  what do you think? I'd love to gain a few music loving friends through  this, maybe some pen friends (keyboard friends?) I love writing - I'm a  copywriter and journalist by trade - so the more correspondence the  better!
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