Showing posts with label Talking Story with Arlo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Talking Story with Arlo. Show all posts

Friday, March 6, 2026

Baby, it's You - Talking Story with Arlo

Rodeo
Talking Story with Arlo

Baby, it's You 

By Arlo Agogo

Put in the wide-open heart of Texas dust and neon dreams, there lived a woman named..... 

Honey Hot Sauce

Yeah, that was her real stage name—born plain old Honey Mae, but the rodeo promoters slapped "Hot Sauce" on her because she could burn up an arena faster than a jalapeño in July. She was the prettiest rootin'-tootin' cowgirl to ever straddle a wild bull and make it look like Sunday brunch.

Voluptuous curves that could stop traffic on I-20, a face like a sunrise over the Panhandle, and a voice that grabbed a microphone and turned 20,000 screaming fans into quiet believers.

But here's the cosmic joke: Honey Hot Sauce was so stunning, so electric, that every man who moseyed into her orbit got spooked. Cowboys with hats bigger than their egos, bull riders with scars and swagger—they'd tip their Stetsons, flash a grin, flex a bicep that could bench-press a calf, and then... vanish.

"Too pretty," they'd mutter to their buddies over warm beer. "She's gonna break my heart into a million pieces and mail 'em back C.O.D." So they rode off into the sunset before the first sunset even happened.

Heartache insurance, they called it. 

Honey said screw it. She bought herself a new RV that smelled like saddle leather and dreams deferred, hitched it to the rodeo circuit, and became the star.

Trick-riding under spotlights, roping steers like they owed her money, announcing the shows with a wink and a drawl that made grown men blush. 

She loved the road—the thump of hooves, the smell of popcorn and manure, the way the crowd roared when she flew around barrels on her paint horse, Starlight. Alone in her RV after the lights dimmed, she'd crank up old records, sip black coffee, and wonder if anyone out there had the guts to stick.

Enter Arlo.

Arlo was a beatnik straight out of a Donovan fever dream. Long blonde hair tied back with a leather cord, sunglasses smudged from too many daytime thought sessions, a duffel bag full of dog-eared notebooks and half-finished short stories. 

He drifted north and south like a tumbleweed with a liberal arts degree, picking up freelance gigs—blog posts about obscure jazz, ghostwriting travel pieces for websites no one read. He lived in a luxury 40ft RV with a backside he'd painted with constellations and quotes from "On the Road." for traffic behind him to read.

No schedule, no mortgage, no plan beyond the next cup of joe and the next open highway.

They met a year ago at a dusty fairgrounds outside Lubbock. Arlo had wandered in chasing a story about modern cowboys; Honey was headlining. She spotted him in the crowd—black cowboy hat (ironic on a beatnik), long hair spilling out, looking like he'd rather be reading poetry than watching bronc busting. 

They talked under the stars after the show. He quoted Keith Richards; she quoted Calf-Roping Times. Sparks flew like a shorted-out lasso. 

For a few weeks, they were inseparable—late-night drives, her teaching him to two-step (he was terrible, all elbows and apologies), him reading her his latest scribbles while she braided her hair. 

Then the old fear crept in. 

Arlo watched the crowds swarm her, the cameras flash, the cowboys circle like hopeful vultures. "She's too much," he thought. "Too pretty, too bright. I'll just get my beat-up heart burned." 

So he moseyed on down the road, leaving a note that said something poetic about "the highway calling" and "not wanting to dim her shine." Honey read it, laughed through tears, and cranked up her old record player. 

The Shirelles came on—"Baby It's You"—and she sat alone in her RV, singing along, voice cracking:

🎶 It's not the way you smile that touched my heart.
It's not the way you kiss that tears me apart.
Uh-oh, many, many, many nights go by,
I sit alone at home and I cry over you.
What can I do?
Don't want nobody, nobody...
'Cause baby, it's you
🎶

Baby, it's you. She cried knowing he didn't believe her—that he was the one. 

The laid-back poet who listened without judging, who loved her for the woman under the sequins and spotlight, not just the Rodeo Queen. But out of a million cowboys and drifters, what were the chances?

Arlo never forgot.

He chased the circuit in his own quiet way—showing up at shows when the wind blew him there, sitting in the cheap seats, watching her shine. He told himself it was research for a novel. 

Truth was, he was hooked. Then came Abilene. 

The National Finals. Big deal, bright lights, the Super Bowl of rodeo. Honey was in the thick of it—trick-riding, announcing, owning the arena. 

Arlo spun his world around 400 miles out, scalped a ticket for the Sunday finals, got himself "prettied up".

He sat ringside, black hat low, heart hammering like a bad bongo solo. There she was—microphone in hand, starlight prancing beneath her, hyping the crowd: 
"Y'all ready for the wildest ride of your life?" 

She scanned the stands... and froze. 

That hat. That hair. Arlo. She pointed right at him mid-announcement, mid-spin: "You! Black hat, long hair—trouble written all over ya. You better still be sittin' there when this show's over, 'cause I'm comin' to get you!"

The crowd whooped, thinking it was part of the show. Arlo just grinned, tipped his hat. The finals roared on—bulls bucked, riders flew, cheers shook the rafters. 

When the last steer was roped and the lights dimmed, Honey marched straight to him. No hesitation. She grabbed his hand, pulled him into the shadows behind the chutes.

They stood there at midnight, arm in arm, slow-dancing to the faint echo of a country band packing up. 

No words at first. Just breathing the same air.

Arlo finally spoke, voice low and beatnik-soft: "Darlin', I'm no cowboy. No big muscles, no bad scars. All I got is this heart and soul, and they're both pretty banged up from the road. You need somebody stronger, badder—"Honey cut him off with a laugh, pure and bright.

"Baby, it's you.

"He blinked. "What?" She pulled him closer. "Don't leave me alone. Come on home. You know I need your lovin'. You know I love you. Baby, it's you. Baby... it's you. 

"She sang it soft, right into his ear—the words she'd cried to alone in her RV. 

The words that said it didn't matter what the world whispered about her being "too much." It didn't matter if they said he'd never stay true (beatniks have a rep, after all). She knew. Any old way, she was gonna love him. Arlo's eyes went wide, then soft.

For once, the wanderer stopped wandering. 

He kissed her—slow, real, no poetry needed. They climbed into her RV that night (his RV would follow later). She drove, he navigated by stars. Somewhere between Abilene and the next horizon, they laughed about how ridiculous it all was—a Rodeo Queen and a beatnik poet.

Two misfits who finally fit.

Honey Hot Sauce still rules the arenas. Arlo still writes his stories—now with her as muse, co-pilot, and co-conspirator. They bicker over coffee (she likes it black; he likes it with existential dread), dance in truck stops, and remind each other daily: Baby, it's you. 

And in the quiet nights, when the road hums beneath them, one of them will hum those old lyrics. The other smiles. No more crying alone. 

Just two hearts, finally believing.

Groove is in the Heart - Arlo

Saturday, January 24, 2026

Meat Suit Gone, Now What? - Talking Story with Arlo

Storytelling
 Talking Story with Arlo
By Arlo Agogo

Meat Suit Gone
Quantum Afterlife Edition – 

Okay, buckle up, buttercup, because we're cranking the comedy dial to 11 on this multiverse meat-suit retirement nonsense.

Last time we dipped our toes in the cosmic kiddie pool of "everyone's right because infinity says so." Now we're cannonballing into the deep end wearing clown shoes, a propeller beanie, and a sign that reads what's next.

Your meat suit expires. Heart stops. Brain flatlines like a bad Wi-Fi signal. The doctor mumbles something polite, family cries, someone inevitably says "he looks so peaceful" while you're internally screaming

"I'M RIGHT HERE, YOU MONSTERS!" 

But plot twist: death isn't a curtain call—it's the universe yelling "NEXT!" and shoving you through one of infinite turnstiles labeled with every belief system humanity ever coughed up.

Picture the scene: Christian Arlo croaks mid-prayer.

Poof! Pearly gates. St. Peter high-fives him with a clipboard. "Welcome, bro! Harp lessons at 2, eternal worship playlist on shuffle—no skipping 'Amazing Grace'.

"Arlo like, "Sweet, no taxes!" 

Meanwhile, in Branch 47-B, the same guy who secretly binge-watched atheist YouTube dies convinced there's nothing. He wakes up in blissful void. Crickets. Zero drama. He's thrilled. "Finally, peace and quiet—no more family group chats!"

Muslim Ahmed gets the gardens, rivers of non-alcoholic bliss, 72 virgins (or raisins, depending on the translation—multiverse covers both bases). He's chilling, thinking, "This is exactly what the imam promised!" 

Cut to parallel Ahmed who converted to Pastafarianism last week: beer volcano erupts, FSM (Flying Spaghetti Monster) high-fives him with noodly appendages. "Welcome to carb heaven, my saucy son!"

Atheist Karen (the one who argued with everyone on Facebook) flatlines. Expects blackout. Instead, she materializes in a sterile white room with a single folding chair. Voice from nowhere: 

"Congratulations! You win the Nothing Prize. Eternity of existential silence. Enjoy your void—no refunds." 

She's secretly relieved. "At least no small talk."The punchline? Your brain is the ultimate afterlife travel agent. From the second you're born, your noggin gets programmed by Sunday school, mosque stories, Reddit threads, that one weird uncle who won't shut up about ancient aliens, and every meme you've ever rage-laughed at. 

That firmware dictates your exit portal. No divine HR department sorting souls—just lazy quantum branching doing the heavy lifting. Quantum immortality takes this to nightmare-comedy levels.

Ever had a near-miss car crash where you swear you should've died but somehow didn't? Congrats, you're the survivor branch! In every other universe, 

your meat suit is roadkill confetti.

But you keep hopping to the "oops, lived" timeline like a glitchy video game character. By age 90 you're a wrinkled prune in a universe where everyone else died decades ago. You're immortal... and alone... yelling at clouds, 

"THIS ISN'T WHAT I SIGNED UP FOR!"

Philosophers were in on the joke centuries ago. Giordano Bruno basically got barbecued for shouting, "Yo, infinite universes, infinite versions of you screwing up differently!" 

Hugh Everett drops Many-Worlds like a mic in 1957: every quantum coin flip splits reality. Supercomputers now nod along like "Yeah, math checks out, bro."

Tegmark says every possible math equation is a real universe. So somewhere there's a reality where pineapple on pizza is a capital crime and another where it's mandatory communion wafer topping.

But here's the golden rule of this cosmic clown show:

Mind your own glorious eternity. 

Stop yelling at strangers about their ticket to paradise. That Jehovah's Witness at your door? In his branch, he's knocking on doors in heaven recruiting angels for overtime. 

The Dawkins fanboy mocking religion? His afterlife is a quiet library where evolution debates itself into a coma. 

Your evangelical grandma blasting hymns? She's probably line-dancing with Jesus right now. Their realities don't crash yours unless you stupidly invite the drama.

The multiverse is so vast it makes the observable universe look like a kiddie pool in a backyard the size of... well, infinity. Realities fork like a drunk person choosing ice cream flavors—every possibility gets its own scoop. 

Yours doesn't overlap with Aunt Karen's unless some rogue consciousness decides to astral-project across branches (spoiler: interdimensional jet lag is brutal). So live like your beliefs are the cheat codes to your personal DLC (down loadable content) afterlife. 

Eat the shrimp if you're secretly convinced Leviticus was just bad ancient Yelp reviews. Forgive the guy who stole your parking spot—maybe in his universe, parking karma is a thing and he's paying for it eternally. 

Laugh at the absurdity because when your meat suit finally yeets itself into the void, the only review that matters is the one your squishy brain wrote.

Final scene: You die. Slide into your custom afterlife like it's the world's laziest waterslide.

Christian? Golden streets, zero traffic.

Atheist? Peaceful nothing with optional existential jazz soundtrack.

Pastafarian? Pirate ship made of garlic bread sailing a marinara sea.

Whatever flavor you pre-ordered, that's the one you get. No arguments. No "told you so." Just infinite custom eternities served fresh.

The multiverse isn't picking favorites—it's the ultimate buffet where every chef thinks their dish is the only edible one, and they're all correct because the kitchen never closes.

Your meat suit has an expiration date, but your ridiculous custom afterlife? 

That's eternal comedy gold.

Groove is in the Heaart - Arlo

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