| Talking Story with Arlo |
Sandal Maker and the Billionaire
’By Arlo Agogo
In a little coastal town where the sun kisses the sand and the breeze hums a lazy tune, I run a sandal shop called Cush & Groove. I’m Arlo, a 58-year-old beatnik with long, scraggly blonde hair down to my back, a tropical shirt that screams “aloha,” and Birkenstock clogs that’ve seen more sunsets than most.
My sandals? They’re not your runway strutters. They’re honest beach kickers—quarter-inch cush of soft foam urethane that feels like strapping pillows to your feet, garment-quality leathers in every color of the rainbow, and Vibram soles tough enough for a logger’s boots.
They don’t wear out, they don’t quit, and they make folks smile. That’s my law of life: positivity, groove, and a little nudge of joy through every step.
A few times a year, a Rolls-Royce would glide up to my shop like a spaceship touching down. Out stepped Jennifer, a Chinese billionaire with a smile brighter than my neon sign and a presence that could hush a storm.
She was stunning—sharp cheekbones, eyes that saw through you, and an air of wealth that didn’t need to brag. Jennifer ran a computer empire, owned data centers across the globe, and lived a life of relentless ambition.
She’d come in to get her sandals resoled or to buy a few dozen pairs to gift to friends, family, and clients.
“Arlo,” she’d say, “your sandals are like giving someone happiness for their feet.”
I’d grin, my messy hair flopping, and say, “That’s the cush, Jen. Pure groove.”
Jennifer liked that I was a beatnik—an oddball who didn’t bow to the world’s hustle. She’d tease me about my “blue aura,” saying it threw off her Chinese business ruthlessness, that take-no-prisoners, crush-the-competition vibe she’d built her fortune on.
Men? She saw them as rivals, never suitors. But something about my laid-back groove got under her skin, like a melody you can’t shake.
One day, she rushed in, needing a pair fixed pronto before jetting back to China. I sent the sandals to my crew in the back and, on a whim, asked if she’d grab a bite next door at the sandwich shop while she waited.
“A spot of tea, Jen?” I said, half-expecting her to laugh it off. But she nodded, and off we went. Over pastrami on rye and chamomile, she spilled stories of unimaginable wealth—private jets, penthouses, deals that moved markets.
Yet her eyes told another tale: the weight of always winning, always fighting. “I don’t know how to stop,” she admitted. I leaned back, hair tangling in my collar, and said,
“Maybe you don’t need to win every race, man. Take it easy.”
She flew off, but when she returned, she called me up for an afternoon date. Not a fancy gala—a walk on the beach, barefoot, her in my sandals. I told her she was too intense, that her billions were enough, that she could slow down and find joy in lifting others up.
“You’re miserable chasing dominance,” I said.
“Try helping someone else shine.” It hit her like a wave. She confessed her life felt hollow despite the zeros in her bank account. My beatnik way—positivity as a law, grooving through life without a scoreboard—felt like a map to a place she’d never been.
We became friends, then something more. Jennifer started bringing me to her corporate meetings, her boardroom sharks eyeing me like I was a gold-digger in clogs. They’d whisper, “Who’s this hippie?” But she’d silence them with a look. “Arlo’s here to teach you something,” she’d say.
I’d talk about the beatnik life—how chasing peace over profit, sharing over conquering, could change everything. Her officers scoffed, but Jennifer listened.
She shifted her company’s mantra. Instead of dominating tech, she started collaborating with competitors, funding startups, and pouring her energy into good.
Her biggest move? A $10 billion charity budget she’d barely touched before. I suggested buying bulk food from Walmart—rice, beans, canned goods—and shipping it straight to food banks. Then ready-to-eat meals, dropped anonymously at churches and shelters worldwide.
“Call it the Groove Project,” I said, grinning. “No one needs to know it’s you.” She loved it. Trucks rolled out, planes took off, and people ate—never knowing a billionaire beatnik was behind it. Jennifer’s smile grew softer, her edge dulled by purpose. She was proud, not of power, but of giving.
Soon, she was showing me off like a prize. “My beatnik boyfriend,” she’d say, laughing, as her friends and family raised eyebrows. I won’t lie—I got a few “pretty face” compliments, and yeah, her girlfriends were a tad jealous.
A long-haired sandal maker with a chill vibe?
I was her rebellion against her old life. She started dressing looser—silk scarves, less severe suits. She’d joke about becoming a beatnik herself, letting her employees run the show while she kept an eye on the numbers. “Trust but verify,” she’d wink.
Her food drops became global news. “Mystery donor feeds millions!” the headlines screamed. No one knew it was her, but I did. She’d hug me and say, “You and your cush changed me, Arlo.”
I’d shrug. “Just spreading groovatrons, Jen.” See, in my world, groovatrons are neutrino-sized sparks from Funkadelia, slipping through souls to nudge them toward joy. Jennifer’s soul? It caught a big one.
Our romance wasn’t all roses. Her world pulled her back sometimes—crises, deals, the old ruthlessness flaring up. I’d remind her to breathe, to feel the sand under her feet. We’d walk the beach, her hand in mine, and she’d soften again.
She taught me, too—how to dream bigger, how to nudge the world without losing my chill. Together, we were a groove that worked.
So here’s the story of how a beatnik sandal maker, with quarter-inch cush and a heart full of funk, turned a ruthless billionaire into a soft-hearted force of good.
Jennifer’s still a titan, but now she’s a titan of groove, feeding the hungry, lifting the small, and walking life’s beach with a lighter step. And me? I’m still Arlo, hair wild, shop humming, spreading positivity one sandal, one soul, one groovatron at a time.
Keep groovin’, cats. Life’s too short for hard soles.
Exquisite Teas for Discerning Clientele
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