Sunday, April 19, 2026

I'll be your Baby Tonght - Talking Story with Arlo

Talking Story with Arlo
Talking Story with Arlo

Arlo and Roxanne: 
The Never-Ending Highway Love Story

By Arlo Agogo

The open road has a rhythm all its own—tires humming on cracked asphalt, sunsets bleeding orange across endless horizons, and the quiet understanding that home isn't a zip code but wherever you park for the night. 

For Arlo and Roxanne, that rhythm has pulsed through five wild, off-and-on years of a love that refuses to settle. 

They're ramblers, pure and simple. 

Arlo's been chasing horizons in his rolling palace for 20+ years now, while Roxanne, the wide-eyed poet of the pair, dove into the van life scene just five years back. 

Their story isn't tidy. It's messy like a desert windstorm, sweet like stolen campfire coffee, and endless as the highway itself. Arlo pilots a 40-foot diesel pusher, a beast of a machine that turns every boondocking spot into a five-star resort. 

Full-size shower? Check. Queen bed that doesn't make your back scream? Absolutely. Starlink for streaming old movies when the stars aren't enough entertainment, a mega stereo that rattles the chassis with classic road tunes, and enough storage to stock a small grocery store. 

He's got slide-outs that expand the living room into a proper lounge, a kitchen where he can whip up chili that feeds an army (or at least a couple of fellow travelers who wander by), and holding tanks that let him stay put without panic for weeks. 

Life in the pusher is cushy compared to the old days of tent camping and outhouse roulette.

Roxanne? 
She's all van life, baby. 

Her rig is nimble, agile, and compact enough to squeeze into spots Arlo's big rig could only dream of. She zips ahead, covering ground like a jackrabbit, chasing sunbeams and stories for her travel blog.

"WanderWords with Roxanne," she calls it—part poetry, part raw road diary, sprinkled with reflections on love, loss, and the peculiar freedom of having everything you own in 100 square feet. 

Her van has advantages: cheap to fuel, easy to maneuver, stealthy for those "no overnight parking" signs that don't apply when you're discreet. But oh, the disadvantages hit hard on a rainy night. 

The "bathroom" is a portable throne squeezed into a closet-sized space. Showers? Often solar bags or truck-stop specials. The bed folds down from the wall, and cooking means balancing a single-burner stove while praying the van doesn't rock. 

Roxanne laughs it off most days—"Small living, big adventures!"—but after five years, the novelty of contorting like a yoga master to brush her teeth has worn thin.

Their dance started five years ago at a dusty BLM campsite in Arizona. Arlo was telling stories around a fire—tall tales of his 20+ years on the road, dodging flash floods in Utah, fixing a busted alternator with duct tape and stubbornness in the middle of nowhere. Roxanne pulled up in her van, notebook in hand, and joined the circle. 

Sparks flew faster than the embers. 

They were boyfriend and girlfriend by morning, off and on ever since. Seasons dictated their paths: north in summer chasing cool mountain air around 70 degrees, south in winter for that perfect mild sweetness.

Arlo liked to linger a month in one spot, soaking in the vibes, writing his own stories—rambling yarns about eccentric fellow travelers, quirky roadside attractions, and the quiet wisdom of the road. 

He supplemented his Social Security with ad revenue from those tales. Not riches, but enough for diesel and tacos.

Roxanne's income came from copywriting gigs—crafting slick ads, video scripts, and commercial hooks for companies that wanted their products to sound adventurous without ever leaving the office. 

She'd park somewhere with decent signal, hammer out campaigns for energy drinks or hiking boots, then hit the road again. Her blog was her heart, though: vivid posts about the poetry of a lone coyote howl or the ache of missing someone who understands the pull of the horizon.

They'd stay in touch through texts and late-night calls. Roxanne's van let her cover distance fast; she'd find Arlo's pusher parked at some scenic overlook or state park, roll in, and they'd claim a month together.

Rekindling was easy—laughs over shared meals in his spacious galley, nights under the stars with his stereo crooning low, stories swapped until dawn. But the road always whispered. 

After a perfect stretch of days, Roxanne would wake with that faraway look. Arlo knew the signs days in advance: the restless pacing, the extra attention to packing her tiny kitchen kit, the way she'd stare at maps a little too long.

"I know that look," he'd think, heart twisting but never begging. There was nothing to do but wish her well, kiss her goodbye, and watch her van disappear down the highway. 

Three months? Six? Who knew? He'd live his life—fixing something on the pusher, jotting notes for his next story, sharing a beer with campground neighbors who swapped their own rambler wisdom. 

His door stayed open, figuratively and literally.

Roxanne was family, the kind that came and went like the wind. Travelers aren't sad folks, especially the ones who've logged decades. They collect laughs like souvenirs: the time Arlo's pusher got stuck in mud and a group of van-lifers towed it out while cracking jokes about "big rig problems." 

Or Roxanne's blog post about accidentally camping next to a nudist colony—hilarious in hindsight, mortifying in the moment. Comedy rides shotgun on the highway. Flat tires become punchlines. Rain-soaked setups turn into dance parties in the mud.This last time, though, the script flipped. 

Arlo was stationary in a quiet lakeside pull-off somewhere in the southern routes, his pusher leveled and humming with Starlink. The season was shifting south, temperatures flirting with that ideal 70. He figured Roxanne was hundreds of miles ahead, chasing her next blog chapter. 

Then, one stormy evening, a knock rattled his door. 

He opened it to find her standing there, soaked to the bone, rain streaming off her silver-streaked hair. She was in her seventies now, same as him—time catching up like an odometer that never resets. 

Her eyes held a flicker of something new: fear, raw and unguarded. 

The road had finally thrown a curve she wasn't laughing off. She stepped inside without a word at first, dripping on his welcome mat. Arlo didn't ask questions right away. He handed her a towel, handed her a cold beer, and let the pusher's warmth wrap around them both. 

"Close the door behind you," he said softly, echoing the old road lullabies in his mind. Shut out the storm. Shut out the worry.Roxanne sank into the big couch, shoes kicked off, the bottle passed between them. 

"The van feels smaller every mile lately," she admitted, her poet's voice cracking just a bit. "Everything's tiny—the shower, the bed, the space to breathe when the wind howls. I've been fine for five years, zipping ahead, blogging the beauty. 

But tonight... I didn't text. Just drove straight here. Knew where you'd be. Didn't want to say goodbye this time without... something."

Arlo nodded, heart swelling with that familiar ache mixed with relief. She wasn't hardened like him yet. Twenty+ years had built calluses on his soul—flat tires, lonely nights, the comedy of mechanical failures. 

Roxanne still carried the wonder, but age was whispering limits. The van's agility was a blessing until it wasn't: tight turns in bad weather, no room to stretch when joints complained, the constant hustle of finding spots that fit her footprint.

They talked into the night, her head on his shoulder. She needed this—one night, one day of their love. Just enough to steady her for the road south. "I'll be okay after," she said, half-laughing through the vulnerability. 

"But right now, shut the light. Shut the shade. You don't have to be afraid." The words hung like a promise.

Outside, that mockingbird they'd heard on a hundred campsites seemed to sail away on the wind. They were gonna let it. The big, fat moon peeked through clouds, shining like a spoon, casting silvery light across the pusher's windows. They let it shine. No regrets tonight.

Arlo pulled her close. "Kick your shoes off. 
Have no fear. Bring that bottle over here." 

Laughter bubbled up—the good kind, the traveler's kind. They danced awkwardly in the galley to the mega stereo, her van parked safely beside his rig like mismatched puzzle pieces that somehow fit. Stories flowed: her latest blog draft about a sunrise that healed a bad day, his tale of a fellow rambler who traded a broken generator for a lifetime of bad puns. 

Comedy kept the fear at bay. They weren't tragic figures; they were survivors with mileage, grinning at the absurdity of two seventy-somethings still chasing horizons and each other.

As the night deepened, worries melted

The road's call could wait. For now, the pusher was their whole world—spacious enough for real comfort, cozy enough for real connection. Roxanne's poet heart found verses in the rain pattering on the roof, in the steadiness of Arlo's presence. "This is what I needed," she murmured. "One night where the highway pauses.

"Morning light filtered in, soft and golden. 

What happened next remains a gentle mystery, the kind that keeps a never-ending story alive. Did Roxanne pack her van and slip away with a kiss and a wave, recharged for the southern push? 

Did she linger another day, or week, testing how the road felt with an open door always waiting? Or did something shift in the quiet hours—age reminding them both that even ramblers slow down eventually?

Arlo won't say. Not yet. The highway holds its secrets, and their love has always thrived on the unknown. He's stationary for now, door wide open in every sense. Roxanne, wherever she rolls, carries that night like a talisman. 

They'll find each other again—off and on, north and south, van and pusher dancing in the same endless rhythm.

Because some loves aren't meant to end at a goodbye. 

They're the ones where you shut the light, shut the door, and whisper into the dark:

I'll be your baby tonight. 

Groove is in the Heart - Arlo

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Dune Buggies, Elvis Presley and Groovatrons -Talking Story with Arlo

 Talking Story with Arlo 

Dune Buggy Time Trip with the Groovatrons: Elvis, Las Vegas and a Cosmic Rescue Mission.

By Arlo Agogo

Man, it was a late Friday night. The clock on the wall was pushing two in the morning when my phone started buzzing like a beehive full of electric honey. 

I knew right away it was something far out.

A whole squadron of Groovatrons from the planet Funkadelia were hitting me up, sending wild texts and sparkling little video clips straight into my pocket universe.“ Arlo, we’re crashin’ your doorstep tomorrow mornin’,” the message read in that bouncy, neon font they always use. 

Been diggin’ those Elvis flicks on the cosmic youtube. We gotta see the King live, baby! Las Vegas, prime time, when the sideburns were sharp and the hips were swiveling like the universe itself was keepin’ the beat. 

You’re our Earth cat, our human connection

Let’s make the scene!”I couldn’t sleep after that. My mind was spinning like a 45 on a turntable stuck at 78 rpm. The Groovatrons, see, they’re these beautiful, glowing essence-beings—once human souls who hung out in heaven for centuries, soaking up pure joy until they found the secret back door to Funkadelia. 

That planet is all rhythm, all sparkle, all Funk with a capital F. Everything there pulses with life, laughter, and those deep, soul-shaking bass lines that make your toes tap even in zero gravity.

Opposite side of the cosmic coin? The Decayatrons. 

Those shadowy buzzkills from the dark edge of the universe. Their whole trip is to dull the shine, sour the milk, and turn up the static on everybody’s groove. They decay joy, man. They’re the ultimate party poopers.

But the Groovatrons? They’re the opposite. 

Pure light, pure love, pure “Humma-humma, baby!” energy. And they always pick me as their Earth guide because I’ve got the right vibe and a 1968 Volkswagen dune buggy that’s been seriously upgraded.

Come sunrise, I was up, scarfing down some toast and groovy jam, feeling the electric presence of my phone exploding with messages. Pictures, videos, little animated hearts and peace signs flying across the screen. 

Over three billion Groovatrons were coming along for the ride, and every last one of them was dressed as the King himself. Men, women, kids, even a few cosmic pets—sideburns, glitter jumpsuits, bell-bottoms wider than the Grand Canyon, and enough rhinestones to blind the sun. 

They were all practicing their Elvis poses and shouting “Thank ya, thank ya very much!” in perfect harmony.I slipped into my own freshly pressed Elvis outfit—white bell-bottoms with silver lightning bolts, a shirt open to the navel, and enough glitter to make a disco ball jealous. 

When you roll with the Groovatrons to an Elvis show, it’s full participation, daddy-o. No half-stepping.I climbed into my tricked-out VW dune buggy. 

Those quantum-entangled hubcaps were glowing soft purple, and the Time Discombobulator on the dash hummed like a satisfied cat. 

The Groovatrons had already programmed the coordinates: Las Vegas, back when Elvis was in his absolute prime—voice like velvet thunder, moves that could melt steel, and that smile that lit up the whole desert.

“Step on it, Arlo!” the dashboard lit up with their collective text. “Let’s roll!” I cranked the key, slammed it into reverse,  hit the Time Discombobulator, and whoosh we were gone. 

Nine hundred miles an hour backwards across the blazing desert. 

The cacti blurred into green streaks, the sky did a little flip, and the radio (somehow tuned to 1970s Vegas) blasted “Suspicious Minds” at full volume. What normally takes an hour at regular speed? We did it in a cosmic blink. 

The Groovatrons know how to set the clock just right. Next thing I knew, we were pulling up to the casino with the giant ELVIS! sign. at ten o’clock at night, the neon signs screaming pink and gold, the fountains dancing like they were in on the joke. 

Valet took one look at my glitter-covered dune buggy and just grinned. “Far out ride, man.” The place was packed tighter than a sardine can at a love-in. We slipped inside, and the Groovatrons did their thing—they infiltrated the crowd like friendly ghosts, adding extra sparkle to every soul in the room. 

The energy went from electric to supernova. 

Women were screaming, men were cheering, and the whole joint felt like one giant heartbeat.

Then Elvis took the stage.

Man, oh man. The King in his prime.

Black hair gleaming, jumpsuit sparkling like the Milky Way, that voice rolling out like warm honey over thunder. He sang for two and a half solid hours— “Heartbreak Hotel,” “Hound Dog,” “Can’t Help Falling in Love,” every classic. 

The Groovatrons knew every single word. 

They were swaying in the audience, adding little bursts of pure Funkadelia joy. People who were just mildly excited suddenly felt like they were floating six inches off the ground. Contact high, baby. 

The Groovatrons give the best contact high in the universe. The night was pure bliss. Laughter, dancing in the aisles, that sweet, sweet feeling that everything in creation was grooving together. I swear the stars outside were tapping their toes.

When the show finally ended and Elvis left the building (with the crowd still roaring for more), I headed back to the valet, retrieved my dune buggy, and the Groovatrons reassembled on my dashboard, glowing soft and happy.

But something was off.

Their usual rainbow sparkle had dimmed just a notch. A few million texts started popping up at once, all serious but still wrapped in that loving beatnik tone.

“Arlo… we saw it. Elvis is in trouble.”

They explained it in their gentle, flowing way. While they were adding joy, they felt something cold and heavy in the King’s heart and soul. 

Decayatrons. Those sneaky shadow creeps had infiltrated deep. 

Not just hanging around the edges—full frontal attack, trying to dim that bright Elvis light, trying to turn the groove into static.The dashboard lit up with worried little emojis and peace signs that looked a little wilted.

“We gotta bounce back to Funkadelia, man. Talk to the Elders. Figure this out.

I nodded, feeling that mix of wild joy from the night and a real pang of concern. We fired up the dune buggy again, quantum hubcaps spinning, Time Discombobulator humming. Back we zoomed through the desert night, 900 miles an hour forward this time, the stars streaking like glitter trails.

When we slid sideways into my driveway, the Groovatrons were already buzzing with purpose. 

Three billion of them, still in their Elvis jumpsuits, huddled in a glowing council right there on my hood. “Elders gotta know,” they texted. “Decayatrons are strong when they outnumber the good vibes, but Groovatrons? 

We’re always stronger when we stick together. Elvis has got that willing heart—he let the joy in tonight. That’s our opening. ”They started making plans right there under the morning sun. The Elders would get the full report. They’d send in special Groovatron troops

Elite joy warriors with extra Funk power. 

The mission: infiltrate deeper, battle those Decayatrons soul-to-soul, push back the darkness with waves of pure, ridiculous, over-the-top happiness. And if the battle got heavy? Well, the Groovatrons have this beautiful last resort.  

When a soul has fought hard and the light inside is still shining, sometimes the universe just… upgrades them. 

Turns them into one of their own. A full Groovatron.

Eternal groove. No more decay. Just endless Funkadelia, where every day is a sold-out show and the King can swivel those hips forever. I sat on the curb watching them glow brighter and brighter as the plan took shape. 

Three billion Elvis impersonators planning a cosmic rescue mission. It was the most ridiculous, most loving, most hopeful thing I’d ever seen.“Dig it,” I said, grinning ear to ear. “You cats got this. 

Elvis is gonna be alright. 

One way or another, that man’s headed for the ultimate groove.”The Groovatrons flashed a giant collective heart on my phone screen. “Right on, Earth cat. Right on. We’ll be back. Next time, bigger show. More glitter. More joy. 

And Elvis? He’s gonna shine brighter than Vegas itself.
I looked up into the desert sky to see a streak of light, the groovatrons headed back home.

The planet Funkadelia.  

As they faded back through their secret doorway to Funkadelia, still humming “Viva Las Vegas,” I leaned back against my dune buggy and laughed out loud. What a night. What a wild, beautiful, exaggerated adventure.

The desert wind carried the faint sound of a distant “Thank ya, thank ya very much,” and for a moment, the whole world felt a little more groovy. Because when the Groovatrons are on the case, even the Decayatrons don’t stand a chance. 

Love always finds a way, daddy-o. Always.

And somewhere, in a timeline we’re still writing, the King is getting ready for his next eternal encore—sideburns perfect, voice strong, heart full of nothing but Funk.

Humma-humma, baby. The adventure continues.

Groove is in the Heart. - Arlo

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Undivided Attention - Talking Story with Arlo

Talking Story with Arlo
 Talking Story with Arlo

Undivided Attention
By Arlo Agogo

Man, oh man, dig this wild, wiggling, far-out scene, cats and kittens! I’m talkin’ about the lost holy grail, the golden ticket, the one true bebop riff that still makes the universe snap its fingers:

Undivided Attention

Picture it, daddy-o. Little me, sneakers all scuffed like they’d been dancin’ with alley cats, standin’ there in the kitchen while my father lays down the law. 

He’d point that finger right between my eyes and growl in that deep, cool-daddy voice: “When I’m talkin’ to you, son, I want your Undivided Attention

No eyes wanderin’ off like a drunk bumblebee, no daydreamin’ about that shiny new bicycle you’re plottin’ to steal the wind with!

”And Mom? She didn’t even need words, man. 

She’d just hit me with The Look. You know the one. That slow, nuclear, eyebrow-raised, soul-piercin’ Look that could stop a freight train mid-track and make it apologize. 

No yellin’, no lecture. Just pure, concentrated Mom-power. 

And brother, when that Look landed, my eyeballs locked in like they were glued with cosmic super-adhesive. That’s when I first learned the beautiful, ridiculous truth: givin’ somebody your full, undivided attention.

Feels like pourin’ warm honey straight into their soul.

The person talkin’? They light up like a Christmas tree in a jazz club. Their shoulders drop, their eyes sparkle, and suddenly they’re spillin’ poetry they didn’t even know was in ‘em. 

It’s joy, baby. Pure, joy school.

College? 

Man, those were laugh riots of ease. While half the cats were zonin’ out, starin’ at the clock like it owed ‘em money, I was sittin’ front row, ears wide open, pencil dancin’ like a bebop drummer on a caffeine jag. 

Teacher says somethin’? I leaned in. I heard it. 

I let it soak into my brain like fine wine into a sponge. Tests? They practically took themselves. Life was a breeze because I gave the folks up front my full, undivided, no-foolin’ attention. 

No drama, no detours, no explodin’ in my own face like a cheap firework on the Fourth of July. Just smooth sailin’ on the good ship Listen-Up. Now fast-forward, daddy-o, to the real comedy gold: 

Me and my big ol’ lovable lug of a dog, Tex, rollin’ through the drive-thru like we’re on a sacred mission from the Fry Gods. The second that window slides open and the smell of hot fries hits the cab, Tex’s ears perk up like radar dishes. His big lab head swivels. His eyes go wide. He knows. Oh, he knows.

We pull into the parking spot, bags rustlin’ like treasure maps. I got my chicken sandwich, pile of golden fries, and—most important—one secret backup hamburger hidin’ in the bottom of that crinkly bag like buried treasure.

The ritual begins.

One french fry for me.
One french fry for Tex.
One for me.
One for him.

Slow. Deliberate. Like we’re sharin’ the last cigarette in a smoky nightclub. Then… the fries vanish.
And suddenly? Undivided attention like you’ve never seen in this distracted, phone-addled world.
Tex freezes. 

He stares at me with those big, soulful, unblinkin’ eyes. Not a whine. Not a bark. Not even a tail wag. Just pure, laser-focused, hamburger-hypnotized devotion. 

He is locked in, baby. If I started recitin’ the Declaration of Independence backwards in pig Latin, he’d nod along like it was the wisest thing since sliced bread. So what do I do? I take full advantage, naturally.I lean in close and launch into the deepest, most profound conversations a man can have with his four-legged best friend.

“Hey Tex, how you feelin’ today, my man? Seen any new cats struttin’ through the neighborhood like they own the sidewalk? What’s your take on my new girlfriend—think she’s a keeper, or should I hide all her good shoes? 

You plannin’ on chewin’ ‘em up again just to test her patience? C’mon, level with me, brother. Give me your honest woof.” And Tex? He listens. He tilts his head. He lets out these low, thoughtful moans and groans like he’s seriously contemplatin’ the mysteries of the universe. “Mmmrrroooaaan… grrrrmmmph.”

Translation: “Yeah, man… deep… real deep… now where’s that hamburger?”  The second I finish my one-man show, I dramatically close the bag, give it a little shake, and yeet it into the backseat like I’m passin’ the torch in a holy relay. Tex explodes into action. 

He attacks that bag like it personally insulted his mother. 

Rippin’, tearin’, crinklin’—total bag massacre. But even in the chaos, his attention stays razor sharp on one sacred mission: avoid the pickles.

Because Tex hates pickles with the fiery passion of a thousand beat poets hatin’ on bad coffee. Two minutes later the backseat looks like a crime scene made of shredded paper and joy. And there they sit—two lonely, rejected pickle slices, perfectly intact, starin’ up at the ceiling like they just got fired from the circus.

Tex looks back at me, fries breath and all, with this proud little “I did it, Dad” expression. Mission accomplished. Hamburger devoured. Pickles dodged. Life is beautiful.

And that, my friends, is the comedic genius of undivided attention: when the stakes are high enough (one more hamburger), even a dog will sit through your entire life story without checkin’ his imaginary phone. Now here’s the serious little heart tucked inside all this silly exaggeration, dig? 

Givin’ somebody your full, undivided attention? It’s still one of the most beautiful gifts you can hand another human being. 

It says, “Right now, in this wild, noisy, scrolling circus of a world, you matter. Your words matter. Your story matters.” No half-listenin’. No dividin’ your brain between them and whatever shiny nonsense is buzzin’ in your pocket. Just pure, present, eye-to-eye connection.It makes people light up. It makes conversations flow like fine jazz at 2 a.m. 

It turns ordinary moments into something warm and real and worth rememberin’. So next time you’re with someone—friend, family, that cool cat you just met, or even your own big goofy dog—try it. 

Put the glowing rectangle away. 

Lean in. Lock eyes. Listen like their words are the only music playin’ in the whole universe.You might just get a few thoughtful moans and groans in return.

And who knows? 

Maybe they’ll even dodge the pickles for you.

Groove is in the Heart - Arlo

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