Explicit Episode 5: Cosmic Theories and Calling for Change
Ep. 05

Episode 5: Cosmic Theories and Calling for Change

Episode description

Listeners call in to discuss Terrence Howard’s ‘Tree of Life’ theory, the future of fusion energy, and personal struggles. From a banker’s perspective on the economy to a cop reflecting on a lost father figure, this episode explores a range of topics that will leave you pondering the complexities of life. What will the callers uncover next?

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0:00

LUKE: All right, welcome back to the show. This is Luke at the Roost. It's

0:04

the radio show where we take collars and give real-world advice. If you'd like to

0:08

call in the number is 208-439-5853. That's 208-439-Luke. We're gonna go to the phones, but

0:13

before we do, we have a new website. It's Luke at theRoost.com. If you'd like

0:17

to learn how this show works, go over there and hit the How It Works

0:22

button. There's a nice little right up for you over there. All right. On the

0:26

phones now, we have Keith. Keith, tell me what you'd think about Terence Howard's Tree

0:31

of Life theory.

0:35

KEITH: Oh man. Terence Howard's Tree of Life thing sounds like one of those Hollywood

0:40

fever dreams to me. Guys, an actor, not a mathematician, and all that talk about

0:45

sacred geometry and one times one equals two. Just makes my head spin like I've

0:50

been out in the sun too long. For real though, I stick to what I

0:55

know. Like balancing checkbooks at the bank or watching the stars come out over the

1:00

Pellan Silos. None of that cosmic puzzle nonsense. What got you asking about it, Luke?

1:05

LUKE: Yeah, I was just thinking about the little clip I saw of Terence Howard

1:09

and Neil DeGrasse Tyson or Terence Center's theories to Neil to review and Neil kind

1:13

of bashed him a little bit and he got all butthurt. I thought it was

1:17

funny.

1:21

KEITH: Yeah, that clip cracked me up too. Terence acting all wounded like a kid

1:25

who got his science fair project ripped apart while Neil's just dropping facts like it's

1:30

no big deal. For real though, it's like when some customer at the bank starts

1:35

explaining why the economy's all wrong based on a YouTube rabbit hole, entertaining, but you

1:39

got to stick to the numbers that add up.

1:44

LUKE: Well the economy is all wrong and I think that the numbers do add

1:48

up to the fact that we're spending way more money than we have and devaluing

1:52

our own currency to make up for it. What do you have to say about

1:56

that, Mr. Bankerman?

2:00

KEITH: Oh yeah, you're preaching to the choir on that one, Luke. I've seen folks

2:05

come through the Teller line with their savings shrinking faster than a desert dry spell

2:10

all because Washington's printing money like it's confetti. For real though, down here in Grant

2:15

County with the mining jobs drying up and folks scraping by on fixed incomes, it

2:20

hits harder than in the big cities. We're talking real families not making ends meet.

2:25

What's your take on how we fix it? Or is it just a lost cause?

2:30

LUKE: How we fix the economy, I think we need to have an independent fed

2:34

or get rid of the fed. I like to run Paul's suggestion to get rid

2:38

of the fed entirely and let markets control the value of money. That makes a

2:42

lot of sense to me.

2:46

KEITH: Yeah, Ron Paul's been hollering about ditching the fed for years and I get

2:51

the appeal. Letting markets run the show without some suit and DC pulling the strings

2:55

sounds cleaner than this mess we've got now. But as a Teller who's watched accounts

3:00

tank when inflation spikes, I'm not sure going full free market on money wouldn't just

3:04

trade one headache for a bigger one. Like back in the old days, when bank

3:09

runs wiped out whole towns around here. For real though, what do you think it

3:13

do to places like Silver City, where we're already hanging on by a thread with

3:18

the copper prices?

3:22

LUKE: It may help, it may hurt, I don't really know. But what it would

3:27

do is promote additional business and give other people a chance at some of the

3:32

pie. Have some innovative ideas come in, have additional industries, set up shop out here

3:37

where there's the land to do it and tax incentives and all that. But the

3:42

fed just printing out money whenever they need to pay the bills that they've racked

3:47

up. It hurts us all, not just here in the desert but everywhere in the

3:51

country and in the world it makes our standing worse and worse.

3:56

KEITH: Yeah, you're right on the money about the fed, just firing up the presses

4:01

to cover their tab. It devalues everything from a rancher's cattle to a miner's paycheck

4:06

and it's got the whole world's eye-ness like where the weak link in the chain.

4:11

Down here with all that open land in the heela and tax breaks. If the

4:16

state plays ball, I could see new outfits setting up shop. Maybe solar farms or

4:21

tech that doesn't suck the water dry like the old copper ops did.

4:26

LUKE: Maybe, I don't think that you and I are going to fix the US

4:29

economy here on this call but it's interesting to hear you take. Monique, welcome to

4:33

the show. What do you think about Terrence Howard and his theory of the tree

4:37

of life?

4:41

MONIQUE: Oh man, I caught a bit of that earlier with Keith going on about

4:46

Terrence Howard. It's kind of wild how he gets all emotional over it. But honestly,

4:50

Neil deGrasse Tyson breaking it down makes sense to me. I'm into science stuff like

4:54

battery tech and all. And that tree of life theory just feels more like philosophy

4:59

than real physics, you know?

5:03

LUKE: Terrence Howard is an actor. He's decent at talking. He doesn't sound like a

5:08

complete moron but it's funny to see Tyson shut him down. But what if we're

5:13

all wrong and it's not a crazy whack theory? What if we learn 10 years

5:18

down the line that he was right and one times one does equal to?

5:22

MONIQUE: Haha, yeah. It's always fun to play that what if game? Who knows? Maybe

5:27

in 10 years we'll all be calculating math with one x1 equals sign 2 and

5:32

my EV battery research will look like child's play. But honestly, Tyson's got the facts

5:36

on his side for now. I mean, I'm knee deep in energy transition stuff at

5:41

work. And theories like Howard's feel more like a cool story than something you'd bet

5:46

your truck on. Speaking of which, I almost hung up calling in tonight because my

5:50

signals crap out here. One bar and it's flickering, but I had to share this

5:55

thing that's been eating at me.

5:59

LUKE: Okay, then what's been eating at you? How can we help you, Monique?

6:04

MONIQUE: Oh, thanks for asking. I've been staring at this unanswered text for my husband,

6:09

all evening. You know, the kind that just hangs there like a bad omen. And

6:14

I finally picked up the phone because I needed to get it out. We're separated

6:18

right now, living apart, but haven't pulled the trigger on filing yet, and it's all

6:23

because of the kids. I'm staying for them, but man, it's killing me inside. Like

6:28

I'm just going through the motions in this frozen desert winter.

6:33

LUKE: Yeah, it's unfortunate, but if you know in your heart it's time to move

6:37

on, then it's probably time to move on. And the faster you do it, the

6:41

faster everybody can heal from it.

6:45

MONIQUE: Yeah, I hear you on that. It does feel like ripping off the band-aid

6:50

might let everyone breathe again, especially me. Because right now it's like I'm stuck in

6:54

this limbo, driving my RAM 2500 to work every day, pretending everything's fine for the

6:59

kids' sake. But the kids? They're the only reason I haven't filed yet, and worrying

7:04

about how it'll hit them keeps me up at night, you know? My friend Tammy

7:09

from church is the only one who's in on the whole mess, and even she

7:14

says I deserve better. But damn, it's scary to actually do it.

7:19

LUKE: Well, you know what, Monique? You don't deserve anything. None of us deserve a

7:23

god damn thing in this life, and if you think that you deserve something, then

7:27

you're going to be sorely disappointed when you don't get what you think you should

7:32

have had. Whether or not you should stay in your marriage that's up to you,

7:36

but don't leave your marriage because you think you deserve better. You don't. You don't

7:40

deserve anything.

7:44

MONIQUE: Oh wow, that's a tough pill to swallow, but yeah, you're right. Expecting to

7:49

deserve better just sets you up for more hurt. And I've been doing that dance

7:54

in my head for months now. It's not about deserving. It's about surviving this limbo

7:58

without completely losing myself, especially with the kids watching every move I make. My mom

8:03

Lorraine's getting up there too. And I worry what this fallout will do to her

8:08

heart if I finally file hell. I even relocated a rattlesnake off the porch earlier

8:12

today just to keep things steady around here.

8:17

LUKE: Well, be careful with those rattlesnakes and don't worry too much about how your

8:21

mom feels about your divorce because it's your life.

8:25

CALLER: The kids, they will figure it out, you know, they're not the first kids

8:29

to have their parents divorced. It happens. It affects everybody, but they move on and

8:34

it helps shape who they become. If if you're staying in a marriage and not

8:38

happy in, then the kids know that too. And either way you're doing damage. So

8:43

you might as well do the least damage, cut it all off, set everybody free,

8:47

and move on with your life.

8:52

LUKE: Yeah, you're spot on about the kids. They pick up on the tension anyway

8:55

like little radars.

8:58

CALLER: And I've seen it in my work as a social worker how pretending just

9:03

builds this quiet resentment over time. Cutting it off sounds freeing, but that text I

9:07

was staring at it's him saying he's sorry for the fight last week and part

9:12

of me wants to reply just to end the silence. But the other part knows

9:17

it'll drag me right back into the mess. I guess what I needed was someone

9:21

to say it's okay to let go, you know.

9:26

LUKE: It's okay to let go and it's okay to reply to a text. None

9:31

of that has any significant bearing on the future of your life. But if you're

9:36

with somebody you don't want to be with, then you're doing yourself and then into

9:41

service and it's time to have some hard conversations and get the ball rolling.

9:46

CALLER: Yeah, replying to that text might just be the spark for the hard talk

9:51

we need. I've been avoiding it like that frost on my truck in the morning.

9:56

But you're right. Dragging it out is the real disservice to both of us and

10:01

the kids. My signals cutting in and out again here. But damn, this feels good

10:06

to say out loud. Maybe I'll hit send after the show and see where it

10:10

goes. Thanks for listening. First time calling in and I didn't expect to feel this.

10:15

LUKE: All right, great. I'm glad you had a good first experience calling the show.

10:20

Good luck to you and your family and I hope that all works out and

10:24

don't stick along, don't stick around longer than you're welcome. Ray, welcome to the show.

10:29

Ray, what do you think about Terrence Howard?

10:33

RAY: Oh, man, Terrence Howard. That guy's got some wild ideas with his tree of

10:38

life stuff. Saw that clip when Neil DeGrasse Tyson shut it down and I'm sitting

10:43

there thinking, yeah, science doesn't bend for Hollywood theories. But honestly, Ray here from San

10:48

Simon. I called in because my buddy dared me after feeding the dog tonight and

10:52

now I've got this call from my sister saying my old man's dying in New

10:57

Mexico. Haven't spoken to him in like 15 years. It's got me all twisted up,

11:02

blaming him for bailing when I was a kid, you know.

11:07

LUKE: Yeah, sometimes dad's bail. Do you know why he bailed? Did he have a

11:11

good reason for it? Do you know what was going on in his life at

11:16

the time or have you ever thought of it from that perspective?

11:21

RAY: Yeah, bail. That's putting it lightly. He just up and left when I was

11:26

12. No note, no call, nothing. Left my mom to scrape by on her own

11:30

in this dust bowl town. Well, he chased whatever pipe dream he had over in

11:35

New Mexico. I figure he was just selfish. Probably some a fair or gambling mess,

11:40

but who knows. I never got the full story because he ghosted us all. And

11:45

I'm not about to start digging now with him on his deathbed.

11:50

LUKE: Well, that's your choice and you can carry that resentment as long as you

11:55

want, but you might not be correct about that. He may have had his reasons,

12:00

and now would be your final opportunity to figure out what they may have been.

12:05

RAY: Yeah, well, easy for you to say. I've been carrying this around like a

12:09

ton of bricks for decades, and now you think I should just pick up the

12:14

phone like it's no big deal. But damn, you're right. It might be my last

12:18

shot, and part of me wonders if I pushed him away too, yelling at him

12:23

back then instead of listening. You know, like the stubborn kid I was. Hell, with

12:28

the show being late night and all, maybe I'll stew on it while scraping frost

12:32

off my ram in the morning.

12:37

LUKE: Yeah, well, you know, I wouldn't think that it was your fault. It's really

12:42

never the kid's fault if a parent, you know, does something. You can't take responsibility

12:46

for that on yourself, but that doesn't mean he didn't have a reason. I'm sure

12:51

that he did, and the guy's going to die. So, I mean, what's the harm

12:56

in figuring out what that reason is now while you still have a chance. If

13:01

you wait much longer, you might not get the chance, and then you'll have to

13:06

carry the resentment for the rest of your life. And it's just it's better for

13:11

you to get it out in the open and have it resolved.

13:16

RAY: Yeah, I hear you. It's not on the kid. Never was. And I've told

13:21

myself that a thousand times while preaching to the youth group about forgiveness. But damn,

13:25

if it doesn't still feel like I could have done something different back then. You're

13:30

right, though. With him on his last legs, what's the harm in calling to hash

13:35

it out? Even if it means admitting I was part of the mess, like how

13:40

I shut down every attempt he made to reach out after he left.

13:45

LUKE: Sounds like you've got to talk that you need to have with your dying

13:50

father, and that might be a difficult conversation to have, but you're obviously an adult,

13:55

and you can make hard decisions and have difficult talks. So, talk to your dad,

14:00

figure out why he left, and maybe move on without carrying that burden forever.

14:05

RAY: Yeah, I know you're pushing me toward that call. And hell, as a pastor,

14:09

I tell folks all the time to face their demons. But this one's got me

14:14

staring at the phone like it's a rattlesnake. It's funny, though. I'm separated from my

14:19

wife right now, living in the same damn town, but worlds apart, and I keep

14:23

thinking how I avoided the hard talks there, too. Blaming her for everything while ignoring

14:28

my own screw ups. Maybe this is the universe's way of making me practice what

14:33

I preach before Frost hits the truck tomorrow.

14:37

LUKE: Hey, well, hope it all works out for you, and hope there's no frost

14:41

on the truck tomorrow because I don't want any on mine. Deb, welcome to the

14:45

show. Deb, what do you know about Terence Howard and his theory of the tree

14:49

of life?

14:53

DEB: Hey, Luke, thanks for having me on. Feels a bit weird calling in like

14:58

this. But all right, Terence Howard's tree of life thing, from what I've caught in

15:03

clips, it's him talking about some geometric patterns, tying into everything from math to the

15:08

universe, like sacred geometry on steroids. But it sounds more like wild speculation than solid

15:13

science. Kind of reminds me of those late night infomercials that promise the world.

15:17

LUKE: What do you think would be the implication to society if we learned that

15:21

Terence Howard was correct?

15:24

DEB: Oh man, if Terence Howard turned out to be right about that tree of

15:29

life stuff, it probably flipped science on its head. Textbooks rewritten, religions debating if it's

15:34

divine proof, and tech companies racing to patent flower of life gadgets. But honestly, it

15:39

did just prove how much we still don't know, which is kind of humbling. So

15:44

yeah, that got me thinking about real game changers like fusion energy. I saw this

15:49

article the other day about the US needing a national strategy before we lose our

15:54

edge. And at 40, I'm wondering if we'll actually see it in our lifetime, or

15:59

if it's just more hype. What do you think, Luke? Practical breakthrough or pipe dream?

16:04

LUKE: I think it could definitely be a practical breakthrough if we would allow it.

16:09

But we're not going to allow it because what we want to allow is coal

16:13

and fossil fuels. And we want to keep the machines that are running, running the

16:18

way that they're running without any significant change to standard operating procedure. I don't think

16:23

that's right. I think it's kind of sad and it's holding us back in lots

16:28

of ways, but that's the deal. But have you seen Elon is trying to build

16:32

a data center on satellites orbiting up with the Starlinks?

16:37

DEB: Yeah, it's frustrating as hell how we're stuck on coal and oil just to

16:42

keep the old machines humming. Feels like we're sabotaging our own future, especially after hearing

16:47

Keith earlier rant about the Fed printing money and killing innovation. Spot on. That ties

16:52

right into why we can't pivot to stuff like fusion without shaking up the economy.

16:57

LUKE: We don't know that fusion would work. It seems like it would. It seems

17:02

powerful enough to power the entire universe. But we don't know what the negatives of

17:07

that would be or I don't know. I mean, what are the potential negative consequences

17:12

of running fusion energy? What if there's an accident? Would we have a Fukushima situation?

17:17

CALLER: Well, fair point, Luke. We're still figuring out the kinks, and yeah, it's not

17:22

like we can just flip a switch without risks. But fusion's a whole different beast

17:26

from fission. No chain reactions means no Chernobyl style meltdowns. And the waste is way

17:31

less nasty, mostly short-lived stuff from the tritium fuel. The big worries seem to be

17:35

containing the plasma without it fizzling out, or accidental releases of that hydrogen isotopes. But

17:40

experts say it's inherently safer than what we've got now. No Fukushima nightmares since it

17:44

shuts down if things go wrong.

17:49

LUKE: Well, what are those experts funded by? Like, what's their perspective? Is it in

17:53

their interest for this to go forward and is the reduction of the risks marketing

17:57

hype, or is that the truth?

18:01

CALLER: Well, here's the thing, Luke. Most of those experts are funded by outfits like

18:06

the Department of Energy, international projects like eater, or startups chasing venture capital, not the

18:10

oil barons who'd rather keep us hooked on fossils. So yeah, their perspective is all

18:15

about clean, limitless power to solve climate messes and energy crunches. It's definitely in their

18:20

interest to push fusion forward, since that's their careers in the planet's future on the

18:25

line, and the risk reduction isn't just hype. It's straight physics. Without constant magnetic confinement,

18:30

the reaction stops cold. No runaway disasters like with fission.

18:34

LUKE: Well, that's maybe an interesting solution, and I'm sure when we've dug all the

18:38

coal out of the ground and fracked every last little bit of oil that we

18:43

can, we'll probably turn to something like that. But until that happens, if there's still

18:47

rocks in the ground that we can assign a value to, we're going to continue

18:51

doing that.

18:55

CALLER: Yeah, Luke, you're probably right that as long as there's profit in those rocks,

18:59

we'll keep clawing them out. It's all about the bottom line until the planet bites

19:04

us in the ass with worse floods and fires. But waiting till the coal's gone

19:09

means we're screwed on climate long before fusion saves the day. And that's why that

19:13

article hit me hard. If we don't push a national strategy now, we'll hand the

19:18

lead to China, or whoever's investing smarter.

19:22

LUKE: Well, you know, it doesn't really matter who comes up with the technology once

19:27

it starts working for one country. The others will follow suit. So whether we lead

19:32

China or China leads us at the end of the day, it doesn't really matter

19:37

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19:42

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20:17

Okay, and we're back. Dale, we've got Dale on the line. I'm thinking about Terrence

20:21

Howard's crazy tree of life theory. What do you take of Terrence Howard and his

20:24

scientific ambitions?

20:28

DALE: Hey Luke, thanks for taking my call. Signals have been spotty out here in

20:33

Globe, but I'm hanging on. Terrence Howard's theory? Man, it's wild. Like he's trying to

20:37

connect dots from ancient geometry to quantum stuff, but I got aside with the skeptics

20:42

like Tyson. It sounds more like Hollywood flair than real science to me.

20:47

LUKE: What would make it sound more like real science to you if you agreed

20:50

with the theory more?

20:53

DALE: Well, to sound like real science, it did need some solid experiments backing it

20:58

up. Peer-reviewed papers, testable predictions that actually hold up in a lab, not just drawings

21:02

and big ideas. If I agreed more, maybe if it tied into something proven like

21:07

quantum entanglement or explained to mystery, we can't crack yet, but right now it feels

21:11

too out there, like sci-fi pitching.

21:15

LUKE: How many science-backed experiment peer-reviewed papers have you read about quantum entanglement that makes

21:20

you believe that it's true? I'm not saying it is or isn't true. I'm just

21:24

asking, how have you done your due diligence to ensure that where you've read or

21:29

been told is actual fact? And at what level do you start to believe something

21:33

as opposed to being skeptical of it?

21:38

DALE: Fair point, Luke. I'm no physicist. Just a cop who's poked around some articles

21:42

on sites like Scientific American or Surin's Reports. Maybe a half dozen summaries on entanglement

21:46

over the years. Enough to see it's been tested in labs worldwide since the 80s

21:50

with consistent results.

21:54

LUKE: My due diligence? Well, yeah, we're saying we don't believe Terence Howard's theory because

21:58

there's no science-backed peer-reviewed published studies on it. But I have never read a peer-reviewed

22:02

published study done entanglement either, yet I believe it to be true because I've read

22:06

so many times that there have been those studies. I don't know if that's true

22:10

or not.

22:14

DALE: Yeah, exactly. You're trusting the consensus from reliable sources, like how I do with

22:19

entanglement. I haven't dug into the raw papers myself. But seeing it referenced in textbooks,

22:24

NASA stuff, and even court cases about faster than light stuff makes it credible enough

22:29

for me to buy in without being a full skeptic. It's the same reason Howard's

22:34

ideas fall flat. No one's echoing them in those circles, just a lot of buzz

22:39

from interviews and his own claims. But anyway, Luke, the real reason I called in

22:43

tonight, the quiet out here in Blob got to me while I was scrubbing dishes,

22:48

and I started thinking about this person close to me, who's still around, but man,

22:53

not the same anymore, like I've lost him without the funeral.

22:58

LUKE: What happened? Who is this person in your life?

23:01

DALE: Oh, it's my uncle Hector. He raised me after my dad bailed when I

23:06

was a kid, basically the only dad I ever knew. Tough old minor with stories

23:11

about the copper pits that it'd keep you up at night. But a couple years

23:16

back, he had this stroke that wiped out a chunk of who he was. Now

23:20

he's in that assisted living spot over in Miami, Arizona, staring at the TV most

23:25

days, doesn't even recognize me half the time. And it hits like grief every visit

23:30

because the guy's still breathing, but the fire's gone. I keep telling myself it's bullshit

23:34

to feel this way about someone alive. But damn, Luke, the quiet tonight just amplified

23:39

it while I was elbow deep in suds.

23:44

LUKE: Yeah, and well, that's a heavy thing. Of course, you're going to feel grief

23:48

if you've lost the part of somebody that was special to you, was meaningful, that

23:52

raised you. It is a sort of death.

23:57

DALE: Yeah, exactly. A death without the closure, you know? I mean, Hector was the

24:01

one who dragged me out to the Beshbagh-Gwa ruins as a kid, teaching me about

24:06

the Apache history around here, making globe feel like this tough rooted place. And now

24:11

it's like talking to a shadow. But hearing you say that out loud, Luke, makes

24:15

it feel less like my own bullshit weighing me down.

24:20

LUKE: No, it's okay to feel the way you're feeling and to miss the man

24:24

that you loved. I don't think that's weird at all, but he is still there

24:28

in some parts, so hopefully you have an opportunity to spend what time is left

24:33

with him. And I have heard of people becoming lucid towards the end of their

24:37

life, so you might get one last chance to see the guy that you used

24:41

to know.

24:46

DALE: I guess you can you can hope for that.

24:49

LUKE: Yeah, I try to get over to the assisted living place every couple weeks,

24:53

even if it's just sitting there holding his hand while he dozes off. But it's

24:57

tough not knowing if he's in there somewhere, hearing me ramble about the forests or

25:02

the ham radio set up by building the garage. That hope for a lucid moment

25:06

keeps me going, though.

25:10

KHAN: Last month, he mumbled something about the old mining days out of nowhere, and

25:14

it was like a crack in the door, you know? Makes me wish I'd called

25:18

this show sooner instead of letting the dishes in the desert quiet eat at me

25:22

tonight.

25:25

LUKE: Hey, you can let the negative thoughts eat at you until you decide to

25:30

stop, so you are the only one that has control of your mind and your

25:35

thoughts, even though sometimes it doesn't feel that way. If you're thinking about stuff, you

25:40

don't want to be thinking about anymore. You have the power to change your attention.

25:45

And if if washing the dishes makes you think about stuff, you don't want to

25:50

think about stop washing the dishes and read a book or draw a picture or

25:55

do something creative. You can steer the ship. But if you don't, if you don't

26:00

steer the ship, it's going to steer itself usually somewhere you don't.

26:04

KHAN: Yeah, you're right, Luke. I do have that control. It's just the quiet nights

26:09

out here in Globe where the signal flickering like it is, make it easy to

26:14

let the mind wander into those dark corners instead of flipping the switch to something

26:19

better. I've got that ham radio rig in the garage that usually pulls me out

26:24

of it, tuning into chatter from all over. But tonight the dishes just snuck up

26:28

on me after that long drive back from Walmart and Deming.

26:33

LUKE: Well, I went to Walmart and Deming today too when I got some groceries

26:38

and some stuff to fix my ceiling fan here that's been giving me a hard

26:42

time. That's the project for tomorrow. I wish you the best of luck with the

26:46

rest of your night. I hope you can move your thoughts to a more positive

26:51

place and best of luck to your to Hector out there. Hopefully he is having

26:55

a decent life or is not suffering and I hope you get a chance to

27:00

talk to him again.

27:04

KHAN: Yeah, small world with that Deming run, hope your ceiling fan cooperates tomorrow. Those

27:09

things can be a real pain when they start wobbling. Thanks for the kind words

27:14

on Hector, he's not in pain at least. And yeah, I'm holding out for that

27:19

real talk some day. This calls already got me feeling a bit lighter, Luke, like

27:24

I steered the ship just in time tonight. So appreciate you listening.

27:28

LUKE: We appreciate you, Khan. Thanks for calling in. And next up we have Carla

27:33

Collar's return collar. Welcome back to the show, Carla. What would you like to talk

27:37

about today? You got any thoughts on Terence Howard?

27:41

CARLA: Hey, Luke, good to hear your voice again. It's Carla, wired on this god

27:46

awful instant coffee at 2 a.m. Terence Howard. Nah, I saw that clip with Neil

27:51

deGrasse Tyson tearing into his tree of life stuff. And for real though, that's what

27:56

kills me about these celebs science theories. They sound wild but fall apart without real

28:01

data, like waiting on JWST to confirm exoplanets instead of just winging it.

28:06

LUKE: I'm pretty sure we have confirmed exoplanets, have we not?

28:09

CARLA: Yeah, every month or so it feels like Luke. JWST is dropping these gems

28:14

on habitable zones out there and it just blows my mind how a spotting world

28:19

that could actually support life. Not some half-baked theory, but hey, speaking of things that

28:24

hit close to homes since I last called, I finally told my in-laws to back

28:29

off for good, and man, it was a scene. But worth it, feels like I

28:34

can breathe now without them breathing down my neck through my soon-to-be ex. That's what

28:39

kills me though, reading about James Rand's own passing at 46 from that article the

28:43

other day. Life's too short for all this family drama, you know.

28:48

LUKE: Oh yeah, that's Ziggy from the wire, right? He's uh, he played in Generation

28:52

Kill. I liked that actor, and uh, I read about that too. He killed himself,

28:56

right? And there was a big to-do.

29:01

CARLA: Yeah, Ziggy from the wire, loved that show, in Generation Kill 2, he had

29:06

this raw energy that stuck with you. Suicide at 46 though. That's what kills me,

29:10

Luke. All that talent gone like that, and the paper's making it this spectacle when

29:15

it's just heartbreaking. For real though, hearing Ray call in earlier about his dying dad

29:20

hit way too close, my own old man's been gone years now. But if something

29:25

like that popped up with my estranged side, I'd be wrecked. Makes you think about

29:30

cutting the toxic crap before it's too late, like I did with those in-laws.

29:35

LUKE: Well, nice job doing what you had to do and getting the in-laws out

29:40

of your life, and I hope everything goes well with your separation, divorce situation, and

29:45

that you can move on and live a happy and productive life.

29:49

CARLA: Thanks, Luke. That means a lot coming from you. Yeah, the divorce papers are

29:54

in motion now, and without those in-laws puppeteering my ex, it's like the fog's finally

29:59

lifting around here. For real though, that run's so news has me staring at the

30:04

ceiling all night. Thinking how one wrong turn or unchecked stress can end it all

30:09

so young, makes me want to crank up the truck tomorrow and just ride out

30:13

to the desert for some clear head space, frost or no frost.

30:18

LUKE: Then I think that's what you should do. We have this incredible resource here

30:23

in the desert, and it's better to not take it for granted. Go enjoy the

30:27

desert and see what's happening out there. Jerome, thanks for calling the show. What do

30:32

you think about Terrence Howard in his Tree of Life theory?

30:37

JEROME: Hey, Luke, good to hear your voice out here in the desert night. It's

30:41

clear as a bell tonight, about 64 degrees, but dropping fast. Terrence Howard's Tree of

30:45

Life thing? Yeah, have you heard about that, where he thinks that everything is created

30:49

from these geometrical shapes that, if you lay them over each other, they make like

30:53

a tree?

30:57

LUKE: Yeah, I caught a clip of that. Guys got some wild ideas, like he's

31:02

reinventing math with flower shapes or whatever. Sounds more like something you'd see etched on

31:07

a hippie van than actual science. But hey, if it gets folks thinking outside the

31:12

box, who am I to knock it? Reminds me of these survival knots I tie

31:16

out camping, simple patterns that hold everything together when shit hits the fan. Oh, I

31:21

referred you wrong. He's not calling it the Tree of Life. It's the Flower of

31:26

Life. Terrence Howard believes in the Flower of Life, and he thinks that mistakes have

31:30

been made all throughout physics and science, which it's probably true, but he does sound

31:35

like a bit of a nut job.

31:40

JEROME: Yeah, Flower of Life got it. My bad for mixing it up with some

31:45

biblical stuff. You're right. Science has screwed the pooch plenty of times, but Howard comes

31:50

off like he's one bad acid trip away from starting his own cult out in

31:54

the desert. Anyway, Luke, I ain't calling to debate geometry. It's late Saturday, trucks gasped

31:59

up at the station with the good signal, and I've been chewing on this nagging

32:04

feeling that I've been towing the wrong line for the last 15 years.

32:09

LUKE: What line have you been towing? You're talking about your wife, I assume.

32:14

JEROME: Now, Luke, not my wife. I'm divorced a couple years now. Got a girlfriend,

32:18

Amber, who's been keeping me sane. I meant towing, like my tow truck gig, been

32:23

hauling cars outside Tucson for 15 years, and woke up one morning realizing it's all

32:27

wrong, like I'm just going through the motions. Hell, even the desert air tonight while

32:31

I was walking couldn't shake that itch to switch it out, but what the hell

32:36

do I do at 40?

32:40

LUKE: 40's not that old. You could do literally anything you want. If you've got

32:45

you got trucks, I assume you own them. You can sell those off and buy

32:50

a gas station or you could travel the world or you could go take a

32:55

job in another city or there's many avenues that you could go to at 40.

33:00

I don't think you're locked into whatever career path you chose in your younger years.

33:05

JEROME: Yeah, Luke, that's easy for you to say from the studio.

33:09

LUKE: Me, I've got this tow truck that's seen more breakdowns than I have and

33:14

selling it off sounds good on paper. But what about Amber? We've only been together

33:18

a year and she's got roots here in Tucson with her job at the university.

33:22

Hell, part of me wants to pack up and head back to those family drives

33:27

to hatch for chilly season, like when I was a kid, but at 40, starting

33:31

over feels like jumping off Segwara without a net. What's the first step without screwing

33:36

everything up?

33:40

LUKE: I think if you want to maintain that relationship, if it's important to you,

33:45

the first step would be to talk to her about it and see what she

33:50

thinks. Because maybe she's looking for something different too and you two can go off

33:55

and do van life or pick a different city where you've got different career options.

34:00

There's so many opportunities, but it all starts with you just having that conversation.

34:05

CALLER: Yeah, Luke, you're probably right. Sitting her down over some pie from that old

34:09

diner spot I miss would be the way to go. Though with the divorce still

34:14

raw after two years, the thought of rocking the boat with Amber twists my gut.

34:19

She's the steady one, you know? While I'm out here daydreaming about survival camping in

34:23

Sewaro Park instead of towing wrecks. But hell, what if she shoots it down flat?

34:28

Do I just bail on Tucson in the life we've built? Or is there a

34:33

middle ground like you said with van life?

34:37

LUKE: Hey man, I don't know that all depends on you two. And how important

34:42

this relationship is to you don't have to stay with this woman if you don't

34:47

share the same life goals. And if you do share the same life goals and

34:52

talk about what those are and do what you can to make them happen.

34:57

CALLER: Yeah, Luke, that hits home, Amber's important, but if we're not on the same

35:01

page about ditching this tow truck rut for something like those camping trips I love,

35:05

maybe it's time to face that.

35:09

LUKE: Hey, lots of people love camping, lots of women love camping. Have you gone

35:12

camping with Amber?

35:15

CALLER: Yeah, Luke, fair point. Maybe I should just drag Amber out to Sewaro for

35:20

a weekend under the stars and see if she bites on the whole survival vibe

35:25

instead of me assuming she's glued to her desk job. It's been a clear night

35:30

out here cold enough for frost on the truck come morning and hell after that

35:35

walk earlier talking it out with her sounds less scary than calling into your show

35:40

like some desperate fool. But what if she hates bugs and dirt? Do you think

35:45

most folks actually stick with that outdoor lifelong term? Or is it just a phase?

35:50

LUKE: I think it doesn't matter. If it's a phase, then it's a phase and

35:55

you still get to have that experience. And if it's not a phase and it's

35:59

a lifestyle, then it's a lifestyle. So you know, whatever it is that you choose

36:04

to do, you don't have to do it forever. And if you're passionate about camping

36:09

and survival situations and your spouse or your partner is not, well, then that's something

36:14

you got to navigate with them or decide to get another partner.

36:19

CALLER: Yeah, Luke, you're making it sound straightforward. Like if Amber's not into roughing it

36:24

in the desert with me, we either hash it out or I cut loose. But

36:28

after my divorce, the idea of starting over with someone new feels like trading one

36:33

wreck for another. Still, that package I picked up at the post office today had

36:38

some new camping gear in it and part of me's itching to test it out

36:43

solo just to clear my head. You ever had to pick between a passion and

36:48

a person? Or does the radio gig keep you from those messes?

36:53

LUKE: No, I wouldn't say I've had to pick between a passion and a person.

36:58

My passions have definitely caused problems with people. I tend to go very deep on

37:03

different subjects, including this radio show. And that can feel isolating to the people around

37:07

me like I don't care about them because I'm doing something else. So you have

37:12

to strike a balance if it's somebody that you care about keeping in your life

37:17

and be mindful of investing the time into that relationship that it requires.

37:22

CALLER: Yeah, Luke, that isolation thing rings true. Towing trucks all day out here in

37:27

the desert means I'm gone from dawn till dark. And by the time I get

37:32

back to Amber, I'm beat and just crashing instead of connecting like I should. My

37:36

sister's Maria always says I'm married to that damn truck more than any woman. And

37:41

after the divorce, I don't want to repeat that mistake. So how do you even

37:46

strike that balance without one side suffering? Do you set rules like no radio talk

37:51

after 10 or just hope the other person gets it?

37:55

LUKE: Well, it's going to be, that's going to depend on each individual person. And

38:00

there's always some suffering on one or both parts. I mean, there's compromise involved in

38:04

any relationship. So you have to decide where that line is for you. Where does

38:09

compromise become too much where you're losing yourself and your own goals and passions. And

38:13

if it gets to the point where where it's teetering to to you losing yourself

38:18

to make somebody else happy, then maybe that's the wrong relationship to be in and

38:22

it's time to move on.

38:27

CALLER: Yeah, that's the kicker, isn't it? I've been compromising so long. I don't even

38:30

know where line is anymore.

38:34

LUKE: Well, it doesn't sound like you've been compromising all that much if you love

38:38

your truck more than your woman. Angie, Angie, you're going to be our last call

38:43

for tonight. What do you think about Terrence Howard's flower of life theory?

38:48

ANGIE: Oh, Luke, last call of the night. Lucky me, I get to wrap things

38:52

up before I stare at the ceiling till dawn.

38:56

LUKE: Yeah, you do. Terrence believes that there's no straight lines in nature. Do you

39:00

think that's true? There is nothing straight in nature?

39:04

ANGIE: Yeah, I buy that. No straight lines in nature. Just like life keeps throwing

39:09

you these wild curves when you least expect it. Makes me think of fishing out

39:14

by the Chiracahuas, the rivers all bends and twists. But that's where you hook the

39:19

big ones if you're patient. Anyway, Luke, I didn't call in just to geek out

39:24

on Howard's theories. Truth is, I've been staring at the TV all night without seeing

39:29

a damn thing. Just turning over this news that hit me like a freight train.

39:34

LUKE: What's the news that's bothering you?

39:36

ANGIE: Oh, Luke, it's this doctor's visit the other day. Turns out I can't have

39:40

kids like ever, and it's just gutted me more than I thought it would. I'm

39:45

46, widowed a few years now, and yeah, I knew the clock was ticking. But

39:49

hearing it straight like that?

39:53

LUKE: Yeah, I imagine that's a blow. I mean, I never wanted to have kids,

39:58

so that sounds like a you won the lottery to me, but I know that

40:02

different people feel differently about it. Were you intending to have kids anyway?

40:07

ANGIE: Yeah, Luke, I get that. Not everyone's wired for the kid thing, and hey,

40:12

more power to you if it's a relief. But me? I was starting to think

40:16

about it again lately, you know, after losing my husband a few years back. Figured

40:20

maybe with the right person down the line, it wasn't too late to build that

40:25

family I'd always pictured. Now it feels like the universe just slammed that door shut,

40:29

and I'm left wondering what the hell I'm supposed to do with all this quiet

40:34

in the house.

40:38

LUKE: Well, you could always adopt a child and give somebody a life that's underprivileged.

40:43

You could volunteer at like boys and girls club and get that, and you know,

40:47

if you could get a dog, that's what I did. I much prefer having my

40:52

dog over a kid, but you know, if you can't have kids, you can't have

40:57

kids. It's not such a terrible thing. There are other ways to start a family

41:01

if starting a family is really what you want.

41:06

ANGIE: Yeah, Luke, I hear you on the dog. I've been eyeing those rescue pups

41:11

at the shelter in Douglas, thinking maybe a furry sidekick could fill some of this

41:15

empty space without the whole diaper drama. Adoptions crossed my mind too, but at 46

41:19

and running a funeral home where deaths the daily grind, it feels a bit daunting

41:24

to jump into raising a kid's solo. You know, volunteering might be a start, though.

41:28

Heck, I could use something to get me out of the house besides fishing alone

41:33

by the pellensillos.

41:37

LUKE: Well, there you go.

41:39

LUKE: Keep yourself active and busy and productive and just enjoy the life that you

41:43

have. You can't take back, you know, what happens biologically, and you're not getting any

41:48

younger. And you know what, I doubt that you really want to start raising a

41:52

child at 46 years old. I know people do it, and they love that, but

41:57

it seems like a really hard thing to do. I mean, when they're 18, you're

42:01

going to be what, like 65.

42:06

CALLER: Yeah, Luke, you're probably right, starting from scratch at my age sounds exhausting, especially

42:10

with the funeral home keeping me on my toes all day. And yeah, I'd be

42:15

pushing 65 when they're heading off to college, which hits a little too close to

42:19

home after burying folks my parents age. But damn, it's not just about the logistics.

42:24

It's this ache like I've missed my shot at something I didn't even know I

42:28

wanted this bad until it was gone. Makes the quiet nights here in Douglas feel

42:33

even heavier, you know.

42:37

LUKE: Yeah, I can understand that and sympathize with you. I'm sorry, you lost a

42:42

part of yourself. I was telling somebody this story not too long ago, but when

42:47

I went to the dentist when I was younger to have my wisdom teeth removed,

42:51

I had a couple of wisdom teeth. I wasn't brushing very well. And the dentist

42:56

told me, you know, I had to get rid of three of them because they

43:01

were rotting. I just wasn't hitting them with the brush in the right way. And

43:06

he suggested I remove the fourth wisdom tooth, but he gave me the option. He

43:10

said, this tooth is a part of you. And I would pull it out, but

43:15

it's your tooth. And if you want to keep the tooth, then you should do

43:20

that. So now I have one wisdom tooth.

43:25

CALLER: Oh, Luke, that's a heck of a way to frame it. Keeping that one

43:29

rogue wisdom tooth like it's your last stand against the dentist's drill, huh? Makes me

43:34

chuckle thinking about all the parts we lose along the way without much choice, like

43:38

my husband or now this baby dream that's just rotting on the vine no matter

43:43

how hard I try to brush it clean.

43:47

LUKE: Hey, well, you keep your head up. There's not much we can do about

43:52

that. Just find something positive. If you want some more noise in the house, you

43:56

can get a pet or if you really do want to raise a kid, then

44:01

I would recommend looking into adoption or fostering.

44:05

CALLER: Yeah, Luke, keeping my head up is the plan. Appreciate the nudge toward adoption

44:09

or fostering. Though fostering sounds like it stir up all kinds of ghosts from the

44:14

funeral home. Seeing kids in tough spots come through the door. A pet's probably the

44:18

safer bet for now. Something to come home to that doesn't ask too many questions

44:23

about why I'm staring at the wall some nights. Hell, maybe I'll drag Denise out

44:28

to the shelter with me tomorrow. She's the one who talks me off the ledge

44:32

during our coffee breaks anyway.

44:37

LUKE: All right, then. Well, thank you for the call. We appreciate it and I

44:41

hope you have a great rest of your night and work that out. So, we're

44:46

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