Stories for the Third Quarter: Midlife, Myth, and Meaning
Scott Bryson, PhD, explores Pancho and Lefty—the classic made famous by Townes Van Zandt and later recorded by Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard—and why it hits differently as we move into midlife.Most of us grow up identifying with Pancho—the outlaw, the legend, the one who lives fast and stays pure in memory. But over time, many of us begin to recognize ourselves in Lefty instead—the one who survives, adapts, and carries the consequences of real life.This episode explores: • the meaning of “Pancho and Lefty” and its enduring impact in country music • why the line “he only did what he had to do” lands differently with age • how myth, storytelling, and perspective shape who becomes the hero—and who has to live with the story • and what the song reveals about identity, compromise, and the second half of lifeBecause by midlife, the story isn’t as simple as it once was.We’re not just the legend.We’re the ones who stayed.And the question becomes: what do we do with the story now?Learn more at https://www.sbryson.com Prefer video? These conversations are also available on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@brysonthirdquarter
22 episodios
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