This song is one of my favorites.
When I’m in a relationship, it just gets me dancing in the kitchen. Suddenly I’m happy to do the chores. It lights me up every time.
There’s something quite intimate about this song too. Put it on while you’re making dinner tonight. Or doing the dishes with the one you love. Make it a memorable moment.
Here’s the thought I had with it this morning.
There are about 350 million Americans. Globally, north of 5 billion of us. But only 50,000 people read this newsletter. The Morning Bergeron is a small, intentional little corner of the world.
So here’s what I want you to do today. Whenever you read this — on your way to work, or in the kitchen making coffee — send the song to your significant other. Or to someone you love. Or to someone you care about. And just say something like: I heard this song today and it reminded me of you. Of how great you are. Of the love we have.
Here’s the song to send them: You Are Mine — Jay Robinson
That’s it. That’s the whole move.
It’s Wednesday. The middle of the week. Let this be a kernel — a small seed of joy planted in someone’s morning. A reminder that you think of them. That you appreciate them. That you love them. That you love the love you have with them.
And if you don’t have that kind of love right now — listen anyway. I’m not dating anyone at the moment. The song still lights me up. It still reminds me what that felt like. Whether you’re in it now, remembering it, or hoping for it, it’s a good thing to sit with for a few minutes.
Then ask yourself — what else gives you that warm fuzzy feeling? Why don’t we go pursue more of it today? Send the text. Tell the friend. Make someone feel a little nicer than they otherwise would have.
The world is disconnected enough. Let this be the small nudge that gets you to reach out.
Be kind.
Warmly,
Rob Bergeron
Owner–Realtor at Award-Winning Winner Realty
PS: Kentucky is #1 in the country for imports as a share of GDP — 31.4%.
#2 for exports 16.5%. No state in America is more exposed to global trade than ours.
That pressure has to land somewhere. Here's where it's landing here in Louisville:
Listings this past week: 533 in 2025 → 673 in 2026
Solds this past week: 312 in 2025 → 289 in 2026
Year to date — New listings: 9,726 → 11,609
Solds: 6,056 → 6,307
More houses on the market. Fewer of them selling. A lot of motivated sellers out there needing a solution.
Do you have one?
