Monday, June 23, 2025

Living in a Pizza Oven - A VW Dune Buggy's Run From the Sun - Talking Story with Arlo

 Talking Story with Arlo

Life Under the Mojave Desert Sun: 
A Dune Buggy Odyssey in the Pizza Oven of June

Greetings, cosmic wanderers and desert rats! Buckle up for a wild ride through the Mojave Desert, where the sun reigns supreme, turning my trusty RV into a pizza oven and my dune buggy into a chariot for dawn-patrolling lunatics. 

I’m your narrator, a grizzled 58-year-old beatnik businessman, part-time philosopher, and full-time sun-dodger, living out here where the cacti whisper secrets and the horizon shimmers like a mirage of a cosmic casino. 

June has arrived, and with it, the Arizona sun—King Sol himself—has declared war on all things foolish enough to linger in his gaze. So grab a cold one, and let me spin you a tale of 4:00 a.m. wake-ups, dune buggy escapades, and the fine art of surviving a desert summer with a grin and a bit of cosmic comedy.

The Sun: Emperor of the Mojave, Tyrant of Thermometers

Out here in the Mojave, the sun doesn’t just rise—it ascends like a flaming overlord, ready to smite anything that dares defy its radiance.
 

By June, daytime temps are already kissing 110°F, and don’t be fooled by the midnight “cool-down” to a balmy 100°F. Mid-July and August? 

Oh, brother, that’s when the desert turns into Satan’s skillet, with daily highs of 120°F and often spikes to 125°F—temperatures that could cook a jackrabbit in its boots or turn a wandering beatnik into a pile of ash with a paisley bandana. 

How folks survived out here before air conditioning is beyond me. I picture them hiding in caves, fanning themselves with Joshua tree fronds, muttering, “Why didn’t we move to Seattle?”

My RV, bless its aluminum heart, is my fortress against this solar tyranny. But even with modern air conditioning cranked to arctic levels, the west-facing side of my rig absorbs the afternoon sun like a sponge soaking up lava. 

By 3:00 p.m., the walls are radiating heat, and my home feels like the inside of a calzone. I’ve got it parked north-south to minimize the damage, but that western sun is a sneaky devil, creeping through my blinds like a cosmic paparazzi. 

My electric bill? A cool hundred bucks extra a month, but worth every penny to keep from melting into a puddle of existential poetry.

The 4:00 a.m. Hustle: Coffee, Chores, and Dune Buggy Dreams

To beat the sun, you gotta outsmart it, and that means waking up at 4:00 a.m. when the desert is still cloaked in a fleeting, velvety coolness. I set my mental alarm clock—because who needs a real one when your brain’s wired to the rhythm of the cosmos?—and roll out of bed, my air-conditioned bedroom a chilly oasis. 

My AC unit, a modern marvel, blasts arctic gusts right at my face, keeping things a crisp 70°F even when the thermostat fibs and says 80°F. I sip my coffee, black as the night sky, and watch the stars fade while the desert hums with the quiet anticipation of dawn.

Chores come first: checking the RV’s water tanks (the sun evaporates everything, even your dreams), securing my dune buggy’s cover (more on that beast in a sec), and making sure my solar panels aren’t caked in dust. 

By 5:00 a.m., I’m itching to hit the trails. 

The Mojave surrounds me like an endless playground, a labyrinth of sandy washes and rocky ridges that beg to be explored. 

My dune buggy, a yellow contraption I call "Daisy" , is my ticket to freedom. It’s got knobby tires, a roll cage tougher than a biker’s attitude, and a motor that roars like a caffeinated coyote.

I fire it up, and off we go, tearing toward the Colorado River as the sky blushes pink and gold.

Sunrise Rides: Chasing the Cosmic Groove

There’s nothing like a sunrise ride in the Mojave. The trails along the river are my cathedral, where the first rays of light paint the cliffs in hues of fire and amber.

Lizards dart like tiny philosophers, pondering the meaning of life before scurrying under rocks. The air is crisp, the wind smells of sage, and for a fleeting hour, the desert feels like a secret only I’m in on.

I crank up some vintage Santana on my buggy’s speakers—because what’s a desert ride without a little “Oye Como Va” to set the vibe?—and weave through the trails, kicking up dust clouds that sparkle like cosmic glitter in the dawn.

But the clock’s ticking. By 10:00 a.m., the sun’s getting cocky, and by noon, it’s the undisputed king, ready to roast anything that lingers. I hightail it back to base, because out here, you don’t argue with the sun—you bow. 

The Arizona sun always wins, like a cosmic mob boss who demands respect. Ignore it, and you’ll be a dehydrated cautionary tale by sundown.

Dodging the Heat: Casinos, Shade, and Naps

Once I’m back, it’s time to outwit the heat. One of my favorite tricks is a jaunt to the Avi Casino, just down the road. Their parking structure, built from pure, sun-defying cement, is a shady oasis where my dune buggy can nap without turning into a solar-powered toaster. 

Inside, the food court is a glorious refuge of air-conditioned bliss. I grab a burger, maybe flirt with the idea of dropping a few coins in the slots—because who knows, maybe today’s the day Lady Luck winks at me.

Spoiler: she rarely does, but the AC and a cold soda are prize enough.

Back home, I park the "daisy" on the east side of my neighbor’s place, where the shade is as precious as gold. I cover it up tight, because the sun doesn’t just bake—it evaporates fuel like a vampire draining a gas tank and thins your oil until it’s basically salad dressing. 

The afternoon is for old-guy naps in my chilled bedroom, where I dream of interstellar road trips and quantum-entangled roadrunners. Or I tinker with my next project: maybe a blog about the Groovatrons, those funky, soul-hopping aliens from Funkadelia who inspire my desert musings. (Check my last post for that wild tale.)

Sunset: The Desert’s Grand Finale

As the sun dips below the mountains around 7:30 p.m., the Mojave puts on a show that could make a poet weep. The sky explodes in purples and oranges, shadows stretching across the peaks like cosmic brushstrokes. If there’s a breeze, the dust swirls just right, turning the horizon into a psychedelic painting.

Some mountains glow, others sulk in shadow, and the whole scene feels like the desert’s way of saying, 

“Yeah, I’m hot, but I’m also gorgeous.”

That’s when I sit outside, sipping something cool, maybe strumming my guitar or scribbling in my journal about the day’s adventures. The desert night is a different beast—alive with mystery, whispering of stars and stories yet to be told. 

My neighbors, those snowbirds who fled the heat, are missing out. They’ll be back when the temps drop, but for now, it’s just me, '68 VW Dune Buggy, and the Mojave’s endless groove.

The Moral of the Mojave

Living here means dancing with the sun, respecting its power, and finding joy in the little rebellions—early-morning rides, casino shade, and naps that feel like victories. 

The Mojave teaches you to move with the rhythm of the day, to laugh at the heat, and to find magic in the dust. 

So here’s to the desert, where the sun is king, the dune buggy is my steed, and every sunrise is a chance to chase the cosmic groove. 

Stay cool, and may your AC always blow cold.

Day Dating Doris Day, A Dune Buggy Adventure - Talking Story with Arlo

Talking Story with Arlo
 Talking Story with Arlo

Day Dating Doris Day: 

A Dune Buggy Adventure with Doris Day

It was a lazy Saturday morning, my designated cheat day, where the world feels like it’s on pause, and my brain’s happily idling.

I was sprawled out, thinking about nothing in particular—maybe swinging by the Hawaiian BBQ joint for some kalua pork—but instead, I whipped up some eggs and toast, the kind of breakfast that doesn’t demand much effort. 

Just as I was settling into my plate, my phone rang, which is rare enough to make me raise an eyebrow. To my absolute shock, the caller ID flashed “Doris Day.”

Yep, that’s her real name, and no, she’s not the Hollywood legend, but she’s just as dazzling in her own way. Doris, my Volkswagen dune buggy buddy, was calling to ask me out on a day date. 

Her ’67 yellow dune buggy, a twin to mine with that same trumpet exhaust growl, had just gotten a tune-up, and she wanted to take it for a spin to Las Vegas to catch the afternoon show at the Sphere—this massive, mind-bending orb plastered with wild graphics, usually hosting concerts but open for a visual spectacle that day. 

“Meet me at the Avi Casino in the morning,” she said, her voice bubbling with excitement. I didn’t hesitate.

"Heck yeah,” I replied, already grinning.

Doris and I are what I call “daytime daters.” We met a couple of months back at a car show, where our matching dune buggies sparked a conversation that hasn’t stopped since. 

We’d only gone out a few times before, twice for afternoon tea and to another car show, but she’s got this infectious energy—pretty as a desert sunrise, with a smile that could melt a cactus. 

I’ve grown fond of her, though I don’t know much about her life beyond the fact that she lives nearby and loves her VW as much as I love mine. 

There’s something special about being asked out as a guy, knowing she’s not just humoring you but genuinely wants to share the day. It’s the kind of thing that makes you feel ten feet tall.

So, come 7:00 a.m., I’m at the Avi Casino, parking my truck in the parking structure and scanning for Doris. I’m decked out in my desert-day-date uniform: shorts, flip-flops, an unmarked basball hat, and my trusty ski goggles for the buggy ride. 

Those goggles are a must—between the wind, bugs, and whatever else the Mojave throws at you, they’re a lifesaver. 

I flip my hat backward, strap on the goggles, and secure everything with the goggle's big elastic band. When Doris pulls up in her gleaming yellow dune buggy, she takes one look at me and giggles. “You look like Snoopy!” she says, and I can’t argue. I probably do, but I’m owning it.

We hop into her buggy, and let me tell you, it’s pristine—shiny, tuned to perfection, and ready to roar. Doris isn’t shy about putting her foot down, either. Holy moly, this girl loves speed, and as a guy who’s no stranger to tearing up high desert trails,

I’m all in

Instead of the direct route to Vegas, we take the scenic path by Lake Mead, the kind of detour that makes you glad you’re alive. It’s about an hour’s drive, and we’re there by early afternoon, the lake sparkling under the sun.

As we cruise near the water, I tease Doris about her spotless buggy. “You avoid mud puddles, don’t you? Gotta keep that pretty ride clean, huh?” I say, poking fun at her polished VW compared to my

--"I need a bath" trail-thrashed one. 

She just smirks, locks eyes with me, and floors it. Before I know it, she’s steering us straight into a mud bog near the lake’s edge. I grab the roll bar as she hits it hard, sending a wave of mud crashing over the windshield. 

It’s a tsunami of sludge, soaking us both. My shorts, her clothes—everything’s caked. She doesn’t stop there, though. With a devilish grin, she circles back for two more runs, each one splattering us further. I’m laughing so hard I can barely breathe. Her buggy’s no longer just a pretty face, and neither is she

—she’s a force of nature.

Now, we’re a mess, dripping with mud that’s already drying into crusty patches. I figure it’s time to show her the bachelor way of handling this. “Over there,” I point to some public showers by the campground. 

“Let's take a shower—clothes and all.” 

She raises an eyebrow, clearly skeptical, but then shrugs and follows me. Turns out, it’s a blast. We stand under the spray, scrubbing mud off our clothes and laughing like kids. 

There’s something about a soaked, smiling girl that hits you right in the heart, especially when you’re as smitten with your new friend as I am with Doris. 

Living in the Mojave, drying off is no issue—ten minutes in the sun, and we’re good as new. I pull out some frozen wild strawberry tea I’d packed, now nicely thawed, and a couple of store-bought biscuits. It’s not gourmet, but it’s perfect.

Refreshed and refueled, we head to Las Vegas, where the Sphere looms like a giant, tripped-out disco ball. We snag tickets for the afternoon show and step inside, and let me tell you, the graphics are unreal—swirling, immersive visuals that make you feel like you’re floating through a dream. 

For just a few bucks, it’s a steal, though I’m already plotting to come back for a concert someday, maybe with Doris. 

After the show, we hit her favorite spot, the buffet at the Wynn Hotel. It’s a food lover’s paradise—piles of crab legs, sushi, prime rib, you name it. We eat, drink, and talk for a solid hour, the kind of conversation that flows so easy you lose track of time. 

She’s funny, sharp, and has this way of looking at you that makes the rest of the world fade away.

As the afternoon stretches into evening, we decide to head back before dark—old people habits, I guess. Doris drives us back to the Avi, her buggy humming like a happy beast. 

She pulls up to my truck, and we get out, 

--she walks up to me, grabs me, pulls me close, and plants a kiss on me that’s so sweet, so electric, it could power Vegas for a night. 

My heart’s doing backflips as she jumps back into her buggy, revs the engine, and peels out with a half-spin, leaving a trail of burnt rubber and a cheerful beep-beep from her VW’s horn.

I stand there, grinning like an idiot, replaying the day. The mud, the laughs, the Sphere, that kiss

—it’s the best day ever.

Make Money, not War - Talking Story with Arlo

Talking Story with Arlo

Talking Story with Arlo

A World Where Money Buys Freedom, Not Fights: 

A Groovy Vision for Global Good Times

Picture this: a world where politicians swap their war drums for calculators, where policy makers ditch missile blueprints for business plans, and where the only thing governments bomb is red tape. 

Instead of squabbling over borders or budgets, leaders across the globe unite under a single, radical mission: let people make money, live free, and love their neighbors. 

Sounds like a fever dream from a tie-dye convention, right? But stick with me—this ain’t just incense and daydreams. 

If we flipped the script and made freedom-through-prosperity the global anthem, the world would be a happier, funnier, and downright funkier place. 

Let’s take a whirlwind tour of this utopia, with a dash of exaggeration, a sprinkle of comedy, 

-- and a whole lotta heart.

The Great Global Hustle: Freedom as the Ultimate Currency

In this brave new world, the UN doesn’t hold summits on sanctions or ceasefires. Nope, they’re hosting Global Hustle Conventions, where world leaders trade tips on slashing taxes, streamlining permits, and turning every citizen into a potential entrepreneur.

Imagine Vladimir Putin, in a tracksuit, pitching a “Vodka Vending Machine Empire” to a room of clapping delegates. Or picture a beaming

Scandinavian prime minister unveiling “IKEA for All”—a program to give every citizen a free toolbox and a dream to build their own furniture empire. The goal? 

Make it so easy to start a business that even your grumpy uncle could launch “Bob’s Discount Lawn Gnomes” from his garage.

Why money? Because money isn’t the root of all evil—it’s the key to freedom. With a fat wallet, you can buy a house, feed your kids, take a vacation, or even fund your neighbor’s weird alpaca farm startup. Money lets you say “no” to nonsense and “yes” to dreams. In this world, governments get it: low taxes, tiny bureaucracies, and sole proprietorships are the holy trinity. 

No more 500-page tax codes or permits that take longer to get than a PhD. Want to open a taco truck? File a one-page form, pay a $10 fee, and you’re slinging carnitas by sundown.

From Riots to Riches: The LA-Mexico Connection

Let’s zoom into Los Angeles, where the news used to scream about riots and unrest. In our world, those headlines are ancient history. Why? Because people aren’t fighting over scraps—they’re building empires. 

Take the folks who once clashed in the streets, many of them with roots in Mexico. In this reality, Mexico’s government has gone full hustle mode. Those hundreds of miles of pristine beaches? They’re lined with locally owned resorts, taco stands, and surf shops, all backed by microloans and zero red tape.

The deserts bloom with artisanal tequila distilleries, and the jungles hum with eco-tourism ventures. Mexicans aren’t crossing borders for jobs—they’re creating them at home, living large in a country that’s as vibrant as their culture.

Back in LA, the streets are calm 

--because opportunity’s everywhere. Small businesses thrive, from Korean BBQ food trucks to Ethiopian coffee carts. Taxes are so low that a barista can save up to open her own café. Sole proprietorships are celebrated like Olympic gold medals, with city hall throwing parades for every new LLC. he result? Nobody’s rioting—they’re too busy counting their profits and high-fiving their neighbors.

Middle East: From Conflict to Carpools

Now, let’s jet to the Middle East, where the old newsreels showed endless conflict. In our world, those deserts are buzzing with solar farms, tech startups, and falafel franchises. Imagine a Syrian coder launching “Desert Airbnb,” renting out luxe Bedouin tents to tourists. 

Or a Palestinian and Israeli duo co-founding “Hummus Harmony,” a global chain that donates profits to community schools. Why are they working together? Because they’re too busy making bank to bicker. With good jobs, nice cars, and cozy homes, nobody’s got time for grudges—they’re carpooling to their kids’ soccer games and planning block parties.


Governments here have shrunk to the size of a lemonade stand, focusing solely on keeping the peace and paving the way for prosperity. Taxes are a flat 5%, and business licenses are handed out like candy. The result? Families thrive, stress melts away, and the only thing people fight over is whose shawarma recipe reigns supreme.

Africa: The Continent of a Billion Bosses

Hop over to Africa, where the old narrative was poverty and strife. In this world, it’s the continent of a billion bosses. Nigeria’s Lagos is a megacity of startups, from fintech apps to fashion labels. Kenya’s savannas host “Safari Side Hustles,” where locals guide tourists by day and sell handmade jewelry online by night. 

Governments have slashed regulations, making it easier to start a business than to parallel park. Microloans flow like rivers, and every village has a Wi-Fi hotspot. Kids aren’t just dreaming of jobs—they’re inventing them, coding apps or launching drone delivery services for mangoes.

The ripple effect? Happiness. 

With money in their pockets, people build schools, clinics, and community centers. Neighbors share their success, not their suffering. The old tribal tensions? They’re replaced by friendly rivalries over who throws the best BBQ.

Asia: From Sweatshops to Sweet Deals

In Asia, the sweatshop era is a distant memory. China’s factories are now worker-owned co-ops, churning out gadgets while paying fat wages. India’s streets are lined with food stalls, tech hubs, and Bollywood studios, all fueled by a government that’s allergic to bureaucracy. 

Even North Korea’s in on the action

—Kim Jong-un’s traded his missiles for a chain of “Pyongyang Pancake Houses,” 

With small governments and big opportunities, Asia’s a paradise of prosperity. People aren’t slaving away—they’re innovating, collaborating, and laughing all the way to the bank. The only thing they’re fighting for is the last dumpling at the company potluck.

The Global Groove: Love, Laughter, and Low Taxes
What ties this world together? 

A global groove, a shared belief that freedom through prosperity beats fighting over power. Politicians aren’t warlords—they’re cheerleaders, hyping up their citizens to chase dreams. 

Policy makers aren’t control freaks—they’re matchmakers, connecting people with opportunities. And citizens? They’re not pawns—they’re players, building lives they love.

The news reflects this shift. No more war reports or riot recaps. Instead, CNN’s top story is “Small-Town Baker Turns Cupcake Cart into Global Empire.” Fox News profiles a fisherman who’s now a millionaire thanks to his sushi food truck. Al Jazeera celebrates a poet who funds her art with a thriving Etsy shop. 

The world’s too busy thriving to squabble.




The Punchline: Freedom Wins

Is this vision a little exaggerated? Sure. But the core truth holds: if politicians and policy makers focused on letting people make money, the world would be freer, happier, and a whole lot groovier. 

Money doesn’t buy evil—it buys choices, and choices buy freedom. With low taxes, small governments, and a culture that celebrates the hustle, we’d see less war, less strife, and more block parties. 

Neighbors would love each other not because they’re saints, but because they’re too busy living well to hate.

So, here’s the call: let’s ditch the war games and play the money game. 

Let’s make freedom the global currency and prosperity the anthem. 

Sunday, June 22, 2025

Where Does Your Mind Reside? - Talking Story with Arlo

Quantum Entanglement and the Enigma of Consciousness: 

Where Does Your Mind Reside?

By Arlo Agogo, 
Desert Philosopher and Tea Artisan

As I steer my 1968 VW dune buggy, "Daisy", through the Mojave’s endless dunes, the stars above flicker like unanswered questions. 

A cup of my Earl Grey Groove tea steams beside me, and my mind drifts to a profound mystery: 

Where does my consciousness originate? 

Is it confined to the neural pathways of my brain, a product of biology’s intricate machinery? 

Or could it be something more ethereal, perhaps quantum-entangled with a realm beyond our physical reality, steering this body like a vessel from afar?

I invite you to question the location of your mind with a blend of science, philosophy, and a touch of desert-born wonder—leaving you to ponder whether your consciousness truly resides within your skull or in a far stranger place.

Let’s begin with the brain, the organ science points to as the seat of consciousness. Neuroscientists describe it as a biological supercomputer, with roughly 86 billion neurons firing in complex networks to produce thoughts, emotions, and awareness. 

The prevailing view—materialism—holds that consciousness emerges from these physical processes, like music from a well-tuned instrument.

Studies, like those using MRI scans, show how specific brain regions light up during tasks, suggesting our experiences are rooted in gray matter. 

Yet, this explanation feels incomplete. 

How do electrical impulses and chemical signals create the vivid, subjective experience of you—your sense of self, your inner monologue, the taste of tea on a starry night? 

This is the “hard problem” of consciousness, a term science hasn’t cracked it. 

The brain might be the hardware, but is it the whole story?

Enter quantum mechanics, a field that challenges our understanding of reality itself. Quantum entanglement, where particles become linked so that the state of one instantly affects another, regardless of distance, suggests connections that defy classical physics. 

Albert Einstein famously called it “spooky action at a distance,” and experiments, have proven its reality. 

Could consciousness involve similar non-local phenomena? Some physicists, propose that quantum processes in the brain—perhaps in microtubules within neurons—play a role in generating consciousness. 

If true, our minds might not be strictly confined to our skulls but could interact with the universe in ways we don’t yet grasp. 

This idea, while speculative, opens a door to questioning whether our awareness is entirely local.

Now, let’s push further. What if consciousness isn’t just a brain-based phenomenon but a signal, entangled with a source beyond our physical reality? 

The concept of a non-local mind isn’t new. 

Ancient philosophies posited that the soul or mind exists independently of the body, interacting with it like a driver in a car. 

Modern thinkers have explored ideas of an “implicate order”—a deeper reality where consciousness might originate.

Could our brains be receivers, tuning into a cosmic broadcast of awareness?

If quantum entanglement allows instantaneous connections across vast distances, might our consciousness be linked to a realm we can’t perceive—a parallel universe, a higher dimension, or what some might call a spiritual plane?

This brings us to the multiverse, a hypothesis gaining traction in cosmology. Theories like string theory and inflationary cosmology suggest our universe might be one of many, each with different physical laws. 

If consciousness is non-local, could it exist across multiple realities, with our brain merely anchoring it to this one? 

The idea sounds fantastical, but it’s grounded in the same physics that predicts black holes and dark energy. 

Imagine your consciousness as a thread, woven through the fabric of multiple universes, with your body as a temporary knot in this reality. 

When you die, does that thread unravel, or does it persist elsewhere? 

Quantum immortality, a thought experiment tied to the many-worlds interpretation, posits that consciousness might always find a reality where it continues, raising eerie questions about 

--- whether we ever truly “die.”

Let’s ground this with a story from my desert life, echoing the introspective tone of my blog

In 1995, I was hitchhiking near Joshua Tree, my poncho flapping under a sky heavy with stars. A retired physicist-turned-truck-driver picked me up, and over diner coffee, we dove into the nature of reality. 

He shared a thought that stuck with me: 

“What if your mind’s like a radio signal, and your brain’s just the antenna? 

Damage the antenna, and the signal distorts, but the source is still out there.” That conversation, fueled by black coffee and cosmic curiosity, planted a seed. 

My brain might shape my thoughts, but could my consciousness originate from a source beyond the physical, entangled with the universe itself?

Neuroscience offers counterpoints. Conditions like Alzheimer’s or brain injuries can drastically alter personality and awareness, suggesting consciousness depends on a functioning brain. 

Yet, anomalies persist—near-death experiences where people report vivid awareness despite flatlined brains, or terminal lucidity, where dying patients suddenly regain clarity. 

These cases, though not definitive, hint that consciousness might not be wholly tethered to biology. Quantum biology, an emerging field, explores how quantum effects influence living systems, from photosynthesis to bird navigation. 

If quantum processes underpin life, why not consciousness? Perhaps our minds are both local and non-local—a paradox, like light being both particle and wave.

As a tea artisan, I see parallels in my craft . A cup of Masala Chai blends spices, leaves, and water into something greater than its parts.

Consciousness might be similar—a synergy of brain, body, and something intangible, perhaps entangled with a cosmic source. 

Meditation, which I practice under desert skies, feels like tuning into that source.

Studies show mindfulness alters brain activity, boosting connectivity in regions tied to self-awareness. Could it also align us with a non-local aspect of mind, 

--- like adjusting a radio to catch a faint signal?

So, where does your consciousness reside? 

The materialist view says it’s in your brain, a product of neurons and synapses. Yet, quantum entanglement and philosophical traditions suggest it might be non-local, linked to a reality beyond our senses. 

The truth likely lies in a synthesis we haven’t yet formulated. As I sip my tea under the Mojave stars, I’m left with awe and uncertainty. 

Is my mind in my head, or is it a whisper from a parallel realm, steering this body like a ship through the cosmic sea? 

I don’t know to know for sure, and neither does science.

This question isn’t just academic—it’s existential. It challenges how you see yourself and your place in the universe. 

If your consciousness is non-locally entangled, every thought you have might ripple across realities. 

If it’s local, it’s a fleeting spark in a vast cosmos. Either way, the mystery invites wonder. As you sip your next cup of life—tea, coffee, or otherwise—ask yourself: 

Where is my mind? 

The answer may be in your skull, or it may be out there, entangled with the stars, in a realm we’re only beginning to imagine.

When I pause and try to find the location of my mind I feel that there is something real important that I don't know.