Love or Money? There is a song I wrote in the column to the right.......
https://youtu.be/ow5bPIeVTzU
Thursday, September 4, 2025
The Love of My Life Really Wasn't: Love or Money? by Julianna Rowe
Thursday, August 28, 2025
Really? Who Cares? by Julianna Rowe
The song to the right is written by me! It goes with this Post. And Copyrighted.
Who Cares? No one knows I gently placed a photo of them high atop my antique wardrobe within view of my slumber area to view at each days end. Or at an interval during the day when I am passing and look up at the photo while tossing a sweater into the hamper, then moving on.
No one knows about the wine glass Sarah painted for me seven years ago with broches laying among the beautifully painted flowers holding the glass. How I walked to get the bamboo stool from next to the high bed, walked to the kitchen to reach the grass on the top shelf. To then walk it back to the old antique wardrobe and fill it with grandma's old broches.
Then set it next to my mirrored jewel box and old doll from Germany not to be seen by anyone, probably ever, as she is hidden back in the dark corner of the tall box.
Who would know the one broch among the many was worn in 1957 at Grandma Tillie's fiftieth wedding anniversary dance. Or that the other broch was worn by me a hundred times while I was a successful insurance agent who walked with a spring in her step and a deep kindness in her heart.
That lover and I secretly driving to a rendezvous area, making love under a large tree that covered us with a secure blanket of safety. After a lingering time never to see him again. Decades later. No one knows my mind in the dark hours before dawn. No one knows the lack of breath I feel or the fear of how to walk in it and with it. The lack of life force energy doesn't offer sustenance. It maintains my temporary life force but....there is no security at the primal base. None, unless I create it and earn paper money for what I create. The broches don't pay. The photo memories don't pay. The rendezvous by the tree is a blip in time for what? A miniscule dot on my brain, an intangible noting no one in any of the vast Universes knows of but me. What was it for? Maybe for this moment only. At 3:11 am four decades later so an old woman could relive that lovemaking rendezvous out in the West Texas countryside with a handsome viral rich businessman just like herself. Then driving away, free, long blonde hair, loosely wrapped scarf blowing in the wind. Smile lingering, and secure. Unlike today. Where nothing matters, no one calls as often, or cares as much. The body weakening, the mind failing. The broch lay in its wine glass tomb and I in my tombstone mind. How do I roll it away so I can get paid and live on. Living isnt free. Only memories are.
Snap out of it. There are more broches under the bed and in the box in the closet.Move on Julianna. You got this. It was just a bad dream honey. Although getting older does change our lives.
P.S. I had surgery today on a skin cancer and could not bend down to get Grandma's broches out from the bottom of my closet for a photo. So I borrowed one online from Zaza of Canada. Those are her broches.... Later's on my Gma Tillie's.
Tuesday, June 10, 2025
The Marble Cake Disorder..... by Julianna Rowe
The Marble Cake Disorder—(Pardon my occasional bad cell "French!")
They never die. They leave their “shit” among us in our cells, our DNA, and spread like diarrhea depending on the percentage of positive or negative cells.
We grieve their bacteria-ridden skin and put marble stones atop their rotting graves (forgive me), but they are still here. Beware of where "they" have been and still are in your mental and physical body.
I am no psychics
professor, but can you imagine the equation for generations of shit? Cells left behind. Good and bad, however, the bad
seem to carry a heavier, louder weight. Say it with a megaphone. Of course,
meekness is not a good cornerstone, yet it is preferred. We mentally paint a pretty
picture of what we want to see, but the other side of the picture is reality. Some call that black and/or white swirling
together like the marble cake mixture of the mind. Impossible. Keep blending it until the black and white levels out and one cannot
take over the other. Hard, I know. Not really if good is chosen, but then, as I
said, the bad dead cells live on, and depending on their strength, their weight can
overtake. So can the good, but the challenge is the rather.
Identify the genes/cells' reproductive shit that is NOT in the grave, rather dancing within you and yours. Kick out the ones that do no good and teach your people the same. (Easy for me to say) The more you “rid,” as in lice, yourself and yours on a continual basis of either the good or bad, they eventually die out and the stronger remains. That is a war that never ends. "The Marble Cake" lives on.
My reference to lice was referring to the immense difficulty in their removal. The product Rid is only the beginning. Each teeny, tiny, minuscule nit (baby) must be picked out by hand, usually more than once. No different than our grandma's generational cells. At least we can see lice!! Grandma left us an invisible challenge.
Religion
calls it good or evil with a Supreme God at the middle in charge of your generational
cake mixture. They say, "Praise and
worship him, and the off-balance marble cake has no power." That works for many to keep the bad cells
from taking over. Balance has never been
easy. Physically or mentally. Balancing dead ancestors is the key to life. Because they are not dead. Grandma’s shit is in your bones, and you better
not forget it.
We busy our
minds. Keep mental rooms with locked doors. When our mental doors are locked, we feel safe and cannot see what is coming. Mentally
or physically until it hits us in the head or knocks us down completely. Like a child hiding under the covers. Yet it's all still there, coming at us or in us. Stop running. Thus, the words. Face your fears or simply
face your generational issues. Or face your
GREATNESS.
It's all in "The Marble Cake."
We all have MPD or MCD to some degree. Multiple
Personality Disorder. Marble Cake Disorder.
You only can
manage and balance your generational Marble Cake.
Taint easy.
The old “He
Ain’t Heavy, He’s My Brother” (or Grandmother etc.) is not true.
Linley C. Morrison—Grandfather
Grandmother and Great-Grandmother My great-great-grandfather is on the left. Harry Morrison-Me age 4
Wednesday, June 4, 2025
Diamonds Are Forever.. A true story by Julianna Rowe
Diamond’s are Forever (A true story)
They say God
speaks to me in a quiet, still voice.
Among the traffic
and life’s harsh noise.
I lie still
in my bed for as long as I can.
To listen
and see if I get to hear from the man…
My ears are ringing
from God only knows what.
And the TV
news is talking nothing but smut.
The next day
comes, and I try again.
Finding a
way to run from political newsmen.
Sitting
quietly watching YouTube’s fireplace scene
Hoping to hear
God’s gentle lighted beam.
When a cluster
of diamond dust burst out of the dark.
Yes, into
the room it was spark after spark.
I counted it
roughly fifteen times over.
As I rubbed
my eyes gently, begging it to hover.
But it
exited the door, and I wondered no more.
If that were
the God that loved me to my core.
What a great
person I must be to receive a visit from thee.
Never shall
I forget how much he loves me.
By Julianna Rowe: A true story
Sunday, June 1, 2025
My Hidden Universe Within?..... by Julianna Rowe
The Brooch?
Who cares? Two words with an ending mark. A question short of emotion...
No one, or any particular person, knows I carefully and gently placed a photo of them at my day's end, high atop an antique wardrobe within view of my slumber area. A silent offering to my hidden universe.
At any interval during any day when I am passing, I look up at the photo while tossing a sweater or socks into the hamper as I move past. Its meaning is only for me.
No one knows about the seven-year-old wine glass Sarah painted for me. No one cares how I walked from one end of the apartment, weak while recovering from a three-week virus, to the other end to get the bamboo stool from the high bed and walk it back to the kitchen to reach that wine glass on the top shelf of the round corner cabinet. Then walk it back to the old antique wardrobe and fill it with Grandma's or my old brooches, set it just right next to the mirrored box and old doll from Germany not to be seen by anyone, probably ever. Who would care anyway?
Who would know the one brooch among the many was worn in 1957 at Tillie's fiftieth wedding anniversary dance? Or one of the other ones was worn by me a hundred times while I was a successful insurance agent who walked with a spring in her step and a deep kindness in her heart.
No one knows the fur scarf came from an $800 coat gifted to me by a lover I met while traveling in the South. We would secretly drive to a rendezvous area and make love in nature near a beautiful, huge tree that comes into my mind on days I might need it. To never see him again. Yet the memory touch sparked a cascade of beauty from a different world, offering me a beautiful yet silent language in a glass in my old bedroom wardrobe. Security, that is. The lack of life force energy doesn't offer sustenance. It maintains my temporary life force, but....there is no security at the primal base of my life at this time. None, unless I create it and earn paper money for what I create.
The brooches do not pay. The photo memories do not pay. The rendezvous by the memory tree is a blip in time for what? A minuscule dot in my brain, an intangible nothing no one in any of the vast universes knows of but me. What was it for? Maybe for this moment only? At 3:11 am, four-plus decades later, so an old woman could relive a love rendezvous out in the West Texas countryside with a handsome, rich businessman just like herself. Then driving away, free, long blonde hair loosely wrapped in a scarf blowing in the wind behind me as a sign something had passed. Smile lingering, secure. Unlike today. Where nothing matters, no one calls or cares. The body weakening, the mind failing.
The brooch lay in its wine glass tomb, and I in my tombstone mind.
How to roll it away like they say Jesus did on the 3rd day?
I must roll it away and move forward to get paid and live on. Living isn't free. Only memories are.
Snap out of it. There are many more brooches under the bed and in the box in the closet. More stories to tell.
You've got this. No one said growing old was going to be easy.
I lean on my hidden Universe within.
Saturday, May 31, 2025
No Empty Corners......by Julianna Rowe
No Empty Corners
I have no
empty corners
I got this
from my grandma Gillie
If there is
an empty spot
I will fill
it with a lot
At the least
a spool, a plant, or table
Anything at
all to keep my mind stable.
Probably why
I am not a couple
For who
could stand such OCD
And park
their car to live with me.
My busy home
is done in great taste
It is a bit
busy but classy at its base.
My home is
full of items from the heart.
I see my
Granddaughter got the same gene
Good luck to
her trying to keep it all clean.
A wonderful
place for your heart to roam
My mini
museum from the 30’s and 40’s
My walls are
my never-ending stories
The
bathroom, the bedroom, using my tools.
Cats and birds
and ten clocks read my days
Old and new,
striped pillows join the maze
Life and
color, come love in my zone
A real live
cat named Bob quietly sleeps
Near a
peacock feather and a strand of pearls
Fairy lights
dance among my collection of mirrors
To keep at
bay a reflection of tears
This happy
place is always fun
Or maybe
it’s just a lonely love story
Oh, hell no,
it is Bogart, love 'n never being sorry
Leather,
rocks, wood, and fairies dance in my lighted glory.
I promise
this is no fish story!
It is the
deep breath I so wonderfully need
By Julianna
Rowe 2025
Friday, May 30, 2025
The Imaginary Crown......by Julianna Rowe
The Imaginary Crown
I used to be a princess with an imaginary crown.
Then one
decade it fell royally down.
Time kept
passing. I stopped to the $1 store
And I bought one more.
It was
plastic and didn’t shine like the original one.
But it
matched my shine I had lost over the years
The old
crown stayed the same
Meantime I
changed my name
Did it help?
Nope, the
crown stayed the same.
It didn’t tarnish; I did.
I put it back on.
Smile,
laugh, come back to your crown,
The one that
sparkles and never lets you down.
Don’t look
in the mirror
Look into
your heart
Then simply
go play with your old dog, Bart.
Love
yourself, wear the dress
Put makeup
on and don’t be a mess
Sing a song
from days gone by
Loud and clear
for all to hear
Wear your
crown to the grocery store
Yes, you
can; let them think your insane
Most will
smile and see your heart
And realize
your old youth needed a jump start
A pretend
visit from that sparkling crown
Lifted you
up from where you’d been down
It didn’t
change the way you appeared
It brought
your heart back up from the rears!
By Julianna
Rowe
Wednesday, May 28, 2025
The Family Blood We "Share"...or Not By Julianna Rowe
Family—The Blood We “Share”
Money is
more important to some than the blood we share or the heart that moves it. The heart cannot move paper. It cannot
purchase medications. It cannot sustain
the body with nutrients. It pumps poison
thorns or velvet strength. And at that,
it cannot without the mind’s offerings.
So, you see
whatever you do and think daily pumps through your veins. It surrounds your being
unseen and even unheard.
Open the mental
compartments for release of the thorns. If not, they shall grow onto your bones,
sucking and tearing your velvet strength, devouring your living nutrients,
and breaking your heart to death.
Don’t let
the thorns take your breath of life.
Julianna
Rowe
Generations of Clue's by Julianna Rowe
Generations of Clues
I burst into this world covered in the muck of my descendants.
The church
poured water, dismissing the demons' rants.
Did “they”
really believe “they” would leave?
The battle
of the good and evil would forever cleave.
They came
from a hundred years present and past.
Fighting for
first place to see who would last.
The greed,
the giving, the love, the hate,
Hurry, take
over fast, and don’t be late.
Kill the mind,
devour the body, and don’t let good ride high.
Those cells
from past grandmothers caused many to cry.
“They“ didn’t
fight them; they laid down and died.
Never
knowing how to choose the Y in the road,
Away from death and onto the living mode.
Generations
of clues pissed in the winds,
No attention was paid to the past hidden sins.
Sweep the
rain that cleanses generations dead cells,
Into the
drains and into their Hells
Where they
belonged long ago
Before they touched
deep into your soul.
Julianna
Rowe
Tuesday, May 20, 2025
The Fairy of Steeple Hill ........... by Julianna Rowe
As the gentle breeze rustled the leaves on Steeple Hill, Lily’s heart raced with worry for the injured bluebird nestled in her delicate hands. Its vibrant feathers, now dulled by pain, reminded her of the shimmering sapphire skies. She knew time was of the essence. Welcome to Steeple Hill, my name is Lily, she said as she helped the little bluebird inside.
What can I do for you, little bird? And do you have a name? Where is your family?
Little Bird did not answer but simply stared at Lily.
Sweet girl, are you hurt?
And that is when Lily saw the tiny tear trickling down her new friend's
face.
Oh, my goodness, what can be the problem here? Do not be
afraid. Let me see if I can help you.
Lily bent down and lifted the little bird onto the soft,
gentle palm of her hand. She raised one tiny blue wing and then the other. The little bird gave out a quiet peep, and that
was all. Lily continued checking and
talking while she tenderly sat Bluebirdie on her best pink velveteen pillow on
her fluffy green bed of soft lavender petunias. Then Lily sat down on her floor
made from scrap carpet pieces and quietly stroked the little one’s delicate
feathers as she sang and then rose to flutter around and around as though she
were dancing a healing ballerina waltz in rhythmic form. Almost hypnotic. Bluebirdie’s eyes followed
Lily’s dance until she fell fast asleep.
Lily decided to do some investigating on her own, considering
Bluebirdie wasn’t coming forth with any intelligible conversation. Lily flew out and up the steep incline where
her house had been built, to the top where she could see forever. But she
didn’t see any other families that might belong to her new guest. Lily flew higher to the treetops, thinking
maybe the little one fell from its home nest. But nothing. That’s it, Lily thought. I must call upon the forest
fairies for assistance. Lily fluttered
back to her home to open the locked golden box she kept hidden behind a loose
rock in the side of her safe haven, also hidden securely among the deep leaves
and trees on the side of Steeple Hill.
She had built it with her fairy friend Lucien when they
arrived in the forest long ago. A fire had destroyed their previous homes high
above the city among the homes of the rich and famous. After moving, Lucien and
his friends had carried rocks and wood pieces for the walls and flooring. They
found scraps of material behind the local stores in the trash bins for counters
and cupboards. Tiny dishes were gathered from the dollhouse remains found in
the trash behind Toyland, the local toy store. They had to be very careful not
to be seen because the humans have deadly sprays and big sticks that will kill them. So, trips to town were rare, if
ever, now that the homes on Steeple Hill were completed. Trips were made only for repairs, which weren’t
needed often.
Lily knew it was time to ring the Fairy Bells because this
was an emergency. It had been eons since there had been any emergency where
she had to remove the golden box and call forth the Forest Fairies.
She tugged and twisted the groaning rock. She thought possibly some of the mud Lucien had
used to seal the outer walls had seeped in near the hiding area of the
emergency glass case. After several attempts, she stopped to regain her strength.
That is when she recalled the mantra necessary for entrance to the box . How could she have forgotten? she thought. With
a whisper of hope, she called upon the Sacred Ramden, known or his wisdom and
powerful magic.
Ramden Ramden, enter thou.
Ramden Ramden, enter thou. Come forth Ramden, we need your help. There is
a lost one on the hill, and only you can do her will. Ramden Ramden, enter thou.
The wall began to tremble. Lily pushed and pulled when suddenly the glass box began to glow as it slid
out of its encrusted grave and opened gracefully. And the luminous, glowing Ramden
swirled out in a grand entrance of diamond dust and glory. His gracefully adorned,
jeweled, glass-like wings shimmered in the afternoon sun, reflecting his power
through his magical garments. He stepped out of his golden chamber, gently
placing one silver slipper onto the carpet and then another. Ramden swirled around, taking in every moment
of space in Lily’s home. He then took himself a seat on her best box chair
covered in velvet with flowers that tied the purple fabric to the box beneath. Ramden spoke.
“Dear Lily,” Ramden
spoke softly, his voice as soothing as a babbling brook. “Fear not, for we
shall find the bluebird’s family. We are all connected by the threads of the
forest.”
Ramden, Bluebirdie came to my door in distress but has not spoken. I have searched as far as I
could to find her family with no results. She is an orphan, and we must find her
family Ramden. Please call upon the
Forest Fairies, for only they have the powers of flight and invisibility to walk
between worlds and to communicate with and manipulate the forces of nature and the
four elements.
By the way, Ramden, “Where is your crown?”
“Oh, my fiddlesticks, I must have dropped it when I slid out
of that stuck hole in the wall. Dear Lily, that needs to be attended to. I may have others call upon my royal status
and authority. I would be stuck in that
stucco your friend Lucien messed up. By
the way, where is that chap of a fellow? Without my circlet crown, my powers are more limited. Now where is this little orphan you speak
of?”
Lily escorted Ramden to her bedroom, where Bluebirdie lay
asleep on Lily’s pink velveteen pillow.
Ramden fluttered back and forth and around the little bluebird for a millisecond, and then with a wave of his magical hand, Ramden summoned the other fairies of the forest. They appeared in a flurry of light, their laughter mingling with the rustle of leaves. Each fairy took to the skies, fanning out across the treetops, calling out for the little bluebird’s kin.
Together, they searched high and low, through the shadows of
ancient oaks and the shimmering glades of wildflowers. As twilight approached,
the fairies’ determination hoped it would bring them closer to finding the
bluebird’s family as they wove a tapestry of hope and unity among the forest’s
magical inhabitants. Lily felt a spark of optimism.
Magnolia and June lived in the big house at the base of
Steeple Hill. Lily’s friends and human sisters with hair like spun gold and
eyes like summer skies often conversed with Lily, who was no bigger than their thumb and who resided in a small fairy cabin on Steeple Hill outside the girls’
large picture window that looked up Steeple Hill. They were the only humans
that could see Lily and the other fairies. That was only because they believed. Lily, with wings the color of amethyst,
confided in them that her royal cousin, Ramden, who possessed powerful magic,
had come to help in the search to locate the injured bluebird’s family.
Ramden, after meeting Magnolia and June, decided to allow the
girls to help locate the bird's frantic family. The girls, ever eager for an
adventure, readily agreed. After all, the human girls had ways of searching fairies
didn’t, and fairies had ways of searching Magnolia and June didn’t.
Using a magnifying glass and a map drawn by Lily on a fallen
oak leaf, they searched the sprawling garden surrounding Steeple Hill,
considering the hill was too steep for humans.
Ramden's magic guided the other fairies of the forest
towards Steeple Hill. The hill, a steep climb even for human legs, proved treacherous for everyone.
June and Magnolia, their hearts pounding with excitement and
a growing sense of urgency, continued carefully searching so as not to step on
any of the other search parties.
Suddenly there was a cluster of activity at the summit of
Steeple Hill. The fairies of the forest, along with Ramden’s magical powers, had
spotted a cluster of anxious bluebirds, chirping incessantly. Their distress was palpable. Ramden and Lily led the family of bluebirds back down Steeple Hill to her tiny cabin outside June and Magnolia’s human house. Little Bluebird was still sitting on Lily’s
pink velveteen pillow in her warm bedroom.
Ramden instructed Lily to bring Bluebird outside, where he spread
his magic all about the human girls, circling them as he called upon the other fairies
to do the same. With each circle, Ramden’s
magical golden dust was shrinking Magnolia and June into tiny human fairies. June and Magnolia kept looking down at
themselves and then up at the huge trees as they continued shrinking until they
fit inside Lily’s precious log house at the base of Steeple Hill. Ramden instructed the girls what to do.
Carefully, Magnolia and June placed the injured bird amongst
its family. A collective chirp, a symphony of relief, filled the air as the
family reunited. Ramden's magical lights pulsed brightly, a wave of healing
energy washing over the small creature. As the sun dipped below the horizon,
casting long shadows across the garden, Lily, with a grateful flutter of her
wings, whispered her thanks. The sisters, hearts full, were whirled back into
their human-sized bodies and returned home, the memory of their magical rescue a
treasure to be cherished.
And Ramden, exhausted, first blessed all the forest fairies
before their journeys back to their homes. He gently hugged Lily, and before he backed
into his golden home, he firmly instructed Lily to get ahold of Lucien to make
sure his next arrival when summoned would be a bit of an easier ride out than
the last one. And with that he was magically placed back into his emergency
golden glass secure magical space.
By Julianna Rowe
Sunday, May 18, 2025
My Sacred Plateau.......by Julianna Rowe
Tuesday, February 25, 2025
About JB by Julianna Rowe
About JB.
Recently, I was
sitting in my kitchen thinking. Mainly because I forgot my phone in the other
room and didn’t want to go get it. I live alone, so the door was open to the
porch, and I could see clearly through my apartment to the outside world and
parking lot. The foggy scene brought to mind another time. The day JB brought me a stalk or three of
dried corn stalks. He was eighty or more
years "old." It was some twenty years
ago when I looked out that same kind of window I was looking out today that
brought back the memory. There was a
small incline off the main sidewalk, and JB decided to take the grassy incline
versus the cement sidewalk with four steps down. I suspect because the base of the stalks were
uneven and might have caused him to fall.
He once told me he never broke any bones when he fell because he learned
how to roll when he went down. Then he
would snicker, and his dimples would become deeper and sweeter. Falling on cement didn’t give much room for
rolling so he opted for the shortcut of the three-foot grassy slanted incline.
I recall it as though it were yesterday.
I held my breath when I realized he was too dang old to be doing what I
had asked. Which was, “Dad, would you
bring me some corn stalks and a couple of bales of hay for my porch
decorations.” It was October and every
year he brought me the stalks, hay, and pumpkins. But this year he was struggling. I felt bad watching him attempt to be the man
he used to be. And I wonder if I
appreciated him in the manner, he was due.
Now that I am headed toward that age and trying to remain able to do the
things I did last year I am reminded.
Maybe my children will appreciate me more after I am gone. Am I laughing? Yes, just a little because one never knows.
All one can do is their best, like JB did staggering down that incline carrying
three large corn stalks, turning around, and going back to his little Chevy
Love truck and making the trip again and again with heavy bales of hay for his
only daughter.
So, there I
sat staring out the window that brought back to life a beautiful story from
days gone by. I think leaving my cell phone
out of the room more often might be a good idea. I could never find a memory like this on my
phone. Below are the original stalks and
bales.
Saturday, February 15, 2025
A Piece of My Life by Julianna Rowe
A PIECE OF MY LIFE
I’ve been with a
multitude of men in my life,
In retrospect they’ve
brought me nothing but strife.
I tried more than
once to make that dance last,
But in the end they
were part of my past.
I didn’t learn much
from any of them.
I already knew more
than most of those men
And not one turned out to be a “Gem.”
A football player, an
Army Vet, a finance banker I’ll never forget,
Some had money, some
had fame,
Most simply wanted to
play loves game.
Some were uneducated,
And some were hippie
related.
I loved a couple of
them and they loved me back,
But mostly just
wanted to hop in the sack.
Men have an
“Extension” if you get what I mean,
But most have no
pension, that would make me glean.
They walk a good
walk,
And they talk a good
talk.
After the sack, they
slither away in the grass,
Which pretty much
makes them a total ass.
I had one or two I
could sincerely call kind.
But those two didn’t
have much of a mind!
There were no
mansions in my life,
I never found one as
funny as Matt Rife.
My sense of humor
called in the same,
Yet none of them had
it, and that was a shame.
Most straddled their
women like they do a Harley,
They would finish the
"job,” but only barely.
What can I say, I’ve
lost my respect.
For most of them are
nothing but a wreck.
They’ve given me
children then ran away,
Not a damn one of
them felt they should stay,
Like snakes in the
grass, they slithered away.
That’s not to say
that all were bad,
But it does leave
little to yearn and that’s pretty sad.
I see fat ugly women
with big diamond rings,
Where did I go wrong? I don’t have all that bling.
Most would agree this
world ain’t easy.
Watch out for the
sheep dressed in sleazy.
They are hiding in
the bushes and in the cracks,
They are evil spirits
who leave their tracks
They'll put a knife in
your heart and tracks on your soul,
Keep your mind and
eyes open and take no black coal.
They will destroy you, if you close your eyes,
Never allow them to
cause your demise.
Walk taller, laugh
harder, and make more money.
So, you won’t stray
if’n they call you honey.
Needless to say, I
have made my own way,
Not without troubles,
but I’m happy anyway.
I love the song, “Is
That All There Is,”
But I’ll keep dancing,
even if it is.
As you can see, I
make silly rhymes,
I’m happy writing
novels and stories of life’s times.
I’m on TikTok,
YouTube, and have lots of money.
I dare anymore
strange men to call me honey!
If you come near me,
I require BLING….
Bling of the heart
and bling in your soul,
But more importantly,
you must be whole!
So, as you can see by
what I have written,
I’ve caused myself
trouble when becoming smitten.
And if I’m meant to
be alone,
Please write on my
Tombstone.
“Here lay a woman who
made it on her own.”
Julianna Rowe – 2024
Monday, October 14, 2024
Before it's Too Late by Julianna Rowe
Before it’s Too Late
I dislike
sitting alone with so much inside….
My brain
wants to run but instead it hides.
So many
pictures flash before my eyes,
My youth, my
loves, the deceased past cries.
There’s a
movie, a book, a photo needs sharing,
Yet I sit in
silence, can’t catch my bearings.
They removed
a body part that helped me function,
Gave me a pill
that’s caused creative disfunction.
I tell “them,”
my ears are ringing and I can’t sing anymore,
Be patient
they say, but know it won’t be like before.
They order
the bloodwork and it comes back normal,
Yet I
continue to feel quite horrible.
They took it
out and threw it away,
My butterfly
thyroid and now I must pay.
The cancer
was a pin head if even that,
The Doc got
paid $10,000 Stat!
Me, I was
dumped and they rarely checked back.
It’s been
two years since I wrote a book,
On the Amazon Best Seller list is what those
meds took!
I want to be
me again before it’s too late,
Because there’s more
to write, before I hit that Pearly Gate.
Saturday, July 27, 2024
PRISON: A Warehouse for Troubles Souls by Clutch Cargoe (2011)
My family is helping me reach out to others who may need my
wisdom. A wisdom learned from the pain of living with angry, ill-mannered
humans and from my own errors that brought me to this no win, no way out,
unfriendly neighborhood.
If any of my writings help you out, I would be pleased to
hear from you.










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