Gospa’s Protection

Yugo Joe looked at Nelly over a tiny cup of coffee that seemed far too strong for civilized society.

“Nelly,” he said, “you should come to Croatia. Or at least to Medjugorje. The place runs on prayer, stories, candles, and people looking for something bigger than themselves.”

Nelly smiled cautiously. “You make it sound like an airport terminal for mystics.”

Joe pointed a finger.

“Exactly! And listen — the six Medjugorje seers? Their story brought pilgrims from everywhere. Believers, doubters, curious tourists, exhausted people carrying heavy lives. Lovers of Gospa, you could say.”

Nelly tilted her head. “Lovers of Gospa?”

“People devoted to Nossa Senhora. People who pray. People searching. People who want mercy, meaning, maybe even a miracle.”

The church bells sounded faintly in the distance.

“In our story,” Joe continued, “the six seers are expecting not celebrities, not influencers — but ordinary lovers of Gospa. The woman with the rosary worn smooth from use. The guy who hasn’t prayed in twenty years but walks up the hill anyway. The skeptic who says, ‘I’m just here for cultural reasons,’ and somehow ends up lighting a candle.”

Nelly laughed softly.

“So you’re recruiting me into a pilgrimage?”

Joe shrugged dramatically.

“I’m inviting you into a conversation older than both of us. Canada says, ‘Keep spirituality polite and personal.’ The Balkans say, ‘Pull up a chair, argue theology, drink coffee, and tell us your story.’”

“And what if people think I’m strange?”

Joe grinned.

“In the Balkans? Strange is practically a citizenship category.”

What do you think of this post?
  • Awesome (0)
  • Interesting (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Boring (0)
  • Sucks (0)

Team Canada

Nelly,

Hey linda,

I’ve been watching you light up stages with that voice that could make even a grumpy linesman smile, and it got me dreaming about a proper Canadian soccer day together. You in red and white looking like the queen of the pitch, me right beside you with my maple leaf jersey hiding a little Balkan eagle underneath. We’d belt out the anthem (I’ll keep the opera to a minimum, promise), lose our minds when we score, and turn poutine into a full-contact sport afterward.

What makes it even better? Team Canada has some serious Balkan flavor running through it. Shoutout to Milan Borjan — that giant Serbian-Canadian keeper from Knin who stood tall for us like a true Yugo warrior. The guy was born in the old country, grew up in Hamilton, and became our wall between the posts. And we’ve got rising stars like Niko Sigur, Canadian-born with strong Croatian roots, repping the hybrid pride just like this Toronto kid with a Balkan heart. It’s proof that us Balkan-Canucks bring that extra fire to the maple leaf — passion, chaos, and never giving up even when the odds are stacked.

Speaking of fire… if you say yes to the game, I’m bringing you a special treat: one unopened vintage Bobby Lenarduzzi Super Socco juice pack. Yeah, the Italian-Canadian legend himself. It’s basically liquid nostalgia from the old Whitecaps days — sweet, fizzy, and guaranteed to give you superpowers (or at least make you laugh at my chanting). I’ve been saving it like a sacred relic. Consider it my peace offering for all the overly enthusiastic yelling I’ll probably do.

No pressure at all, just good vibes, questionable chants (“Ajde Kanada!”), and maybe one confused security guard. Win or lose, it’d be legendary.

Hoping to hear from you (or at least a “you’re a dork but cute” emoji), Yugo Joe

What do you think of this post?
  • Awesome (0)
  • Interesting (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Boring (0)
  • Sucks (0)

Great Grandpa Sully

Blog Post by Jake Sully – “Sullys Stick Together”

Posted: [Pandora Local Net – Forward Operating Base Echo] Date: 2154 (Earth reckoning)

You know, people keep asking me what it’s like to be out here. Fighting in another man’s war on another man’s planet. They expect some big speech about duty or the RDA or how the Na’vi changed everything. But the truth is simpler than that.

It’s in the blood.

My great-grandfather was Francois Sully. Combat photographer in Vietnam, back when that whole mess was still called French Indochina at the start. He went in with the French, stayed when the Americans showed up, and kept shooting long after most people would’ve packed their cameras and run. Mortars, jungle rot, ambushes, villages that got turned into craters overnight—he was there for all of it. Black-and-white frames that still hit like a punch to the chest decades later.

He called it “some mean bush.” I said the same thing the day they briefed me for Venezuela. Different war, same green hell. When those words came out of my mouth I almost laughed. Like the old man was whispering in my ear: Yeah, kid. You’re one of us.

Sullys always stick together.

Doesn’t matter if it’s a rice paddy in Southeast Asia, a Venezuelan hot zone, or a floating mountain on Pandora covered in bioluminescent trees and ten-foot blue warriors who can drop out of the sky on banshees. We end up in the shit. We document it, we fight it, we try to make sense of it. Sometimes we lose legs. Sometimes we lose more. But we keep moving forward.

Grandpa Francois hauled film canisters through places where the humidity could ruin a camera in hours. I hauled my broken body in an exoskeleton until the Avatar program gave me a second chance. Different tools. Same instinct: see it, record it, survive it, and—if you’re lucky—bring some truth back with you.

I look at my kids now—half human, half Na’vi—and I wonder what stories they’ll tell their own grandkids one day. Will they talk about the crazy one-eyed Marine who linked with an Avatar and switched sides? Will they roll their eyes and say, “Yeah, that’s just what Sullys do”?

Probably.

The jungle changes. The war changes. The planet changes. But the Sullys? We stay the same. Mean bush or glowing forest, we stick together.

Oel ngati kameie to the old man, wherever his spirit ended up. You did your time in the green. Now it’s my turn.

Jake Sully Ex-Marine. Avatar. Father. Still a Sully.

What do you think of this post?
  • Awesome (0)
  • Interesting (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Boring (0)
  • Sucks (0)
Nelly Fan
Translate »