Season 2 Episode 9
Pajamas in the Street
In this episode of Faithfulcrum, Mark and Scott talk about control—who has it, who wants it, and what happens when we realize we don’t have nearly as much of it as we thought. The conversation moves through spirituality, creativity, religion, theater, Shakespeare, and even punk rock… but it keeps circling the same tension: there’s always something bubbling up, and something else trying to shape it, channel it, or shut it down.
And as the conversation unfolds, it starts to feel like these ideas don’t just belong in discussion—they want to be sung.
So throughout this episode, you’re going to hear a series of short songs—written in a kind of 1960s Bakersfield country style—that grow directly out of the moments we’re talking through. Each one picks up a thread from the conversation and follows it somewhere a little more emotional, a little more musical.
Here’s what you’ll hear:
First, “The Lord and My Wife.”
This one comes out of that moment where we’re talking about creativity as something you can’t quite control—how the urge to make things pulls at you, even when real life is asking something else. It’s about that tug-of-war between inspiration and responsibility.
Then there’s “The Devil in the Wagon.”
We get into medieval mystery plays—religion performed in the town square—and suddenly you’ve got the sacred and the ridiculous sharing the same stage. This song leans into that image: a traveling show where heaven and hell are closer than anyone wants to admit.
After that, “They Put Salvation on TV.”
That one comes from our discussion of how powerful ideas—religion, art, anything—can get packaged, sold, and used. It’s a look at what happens when something real gets turned into something marketable.
Next is “Still Speaking.”
We talk about the need to “close the book,” to fix truth in place so it can’t get messy. But what if the voice keeps showing up anyway? This song lives in that tension between certainty and something that won’t stay contained.
Then you’ll hear “Don’t Fall Down.”
That comes straight out of the idea that maybe we’re not here to control the wave—we’re just trying to ride it without crashing. It’s about walking that line between freedom and self-destruction.
And finally, “Pajamas in the Street.”
We end up talking about judgment—why other people’s choices bother us, and what that says about us. This one takes a step back and asks: what if we just let people be?

Mark and Scott have been in conversation for fifty years. Born twenty-six days apart into the same complicated religious tradition, they grew up fluent in scripture and shape note singing —steeped in a culture of certainty and devotion.
Scott is a poet, author, educator, songwriter, and community creator. Mark, an educator, performer, provocateur. Together, they bring a shared curiosity to every encounter.








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