A Tiny Bird Bath

As the sun dips low over Vancouver’s Little Portugal, Joe and Nelly—Jelly to their inner circle—stand hand in hand before a delicate chuppah, or hopa as Owen Wilson keeps calling it in his Midwestern-Jewish cowboy drawl.

Owen, still wearing his beige suit from Meet the Parents, explains:

“Yeah so this thing here? It’s like symbolic, you know? Open on all sides… to show your home’s open, like, metaphorically and also literally. And I think it’s… beautiful, man.”

The canopy is held up by four surfboard poles—Owen’s touch—and is decorated with fado lyrics, Portuguese azulejos, and hummingbirds made of recycled guitar strings.

Joe points out the tiny ran, the mythical squirrel-bird hybrid Nelly once dreamed of during a fever in Lisbon. It’s hopping from one birdbath to another, collecting droplets in a walnut shell, building its own nest beside the altar.

“It’s a sign,” says Nelly, in awe. “The ran builds with love.”

They’ve invited the entire cast and crew of Meet the Parents. Ben Stiller arrives late, clutching a cappuccino and a gift card to Home Depot.

Robert De Niro brings his lie detector from the original film. He insists on scanning Joe’s heart before the vows. It flatlines when Joe sees Nelly walk down the cobblestone path in a white embroidered dress that blends Azorean lace and Sephardic stars.

“He’s not lying,” says De Niro. “That’s love.”

Everyone from Little Portugal is there: the old ladies from the bakery, the guy who sells bootleg DVDs, the local DJ who plays Nelly’s “Powerless” on repeat from his balcony.

Owen officiates with surprising tenderness:

“May your home be as open as this chuppah… your hearts as faithful as a ran to its one true birdbath. And may your in-laws never feed your child the wrong kind of milk.”

Then he pauses and smirks.

“And hey, if you ever need a sitter for your kids, I know a guy named Focker.”

Everyone laughs. The ran chirps. The DJ drops “Turn Off the Light.” And Jelly kiss under the open sky—Portuguese tiles beneath their feet, a Hollywood crew behind them, and a mythical squirrel-bird making a home beside them.

Everyone is invited. Always was.

This is test…

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The Corrs Conspiracy

Title: Summer Sunshine and the Revelation of Light
By Joe Jukic
(Underground Fan Broadcast #77: From the Rubble With Love)


Thesis:
Andrea Corr tore the boards off the windows, and that’s when I saw it. Not just sunlight—but the Son light. Jesus Christ. The real Fixer. The Corrs’ “Summer Sunshine” video isn’t just a pop song—it’s a coded gospel transmission, a rescue flare for anyone trapped inside the house built by Stonecutters. I was. Nelly was. And now we’re standing in the light, not because we deserved it—but because we didn’t run.


I used to think the Corrs were just another polished product of the music industry—harmless Celtic harmonies, acoustic guitars, good hair. But I was wrong.

They knew.
Jim Corr saw the writing on the wall: the lockdown lies, the population control agendas, the quiet roll-out of synthetic prophecy.
And Andrea?

She felt it in her bones.
That house in the Summer Sunshine video wasn’t just a music video set.
It was a symbol of the system—our system.
Boarded up. Walled in. Light-blocked. Truth-blocked.


We Were Inside That House

Me and Nelly—we were in it.
Not the literal one. The spiritual one.

A house built by Stonecutters—global elites with digital blueprints and bricklayer bloodlines.
Their mission?
Not chaos.
Completion.

They want to fulfill biblical prophecy—but on their terms.
It’s called making the eschaton immanent: forcing the end times to arrive so they can rule over the ashes.

And while they were boarding up the last spiritual windows, Andrea stepped forward.
Like a pop-star Joan of Arc.
She ripped the boards off.

Not for a breeze.
Not for aesthetics.
But for the light.


The Light That Came Through

It wasn’t just sunlight.
It was Son-light.
The light of Jesus Christ.

And it hit me and Nelly square in the face.
Me—Joe Jukic—the wannabe, recycled, half-baked cousin of Christ.
Broken. Unworthy. Chain-smoking.
Trying to be a prophet but barely passing as a fan.

But still… He shined on us.
Not because we were worthy.
But because we stayed.

We didn’t escape the house.
We let it collapse around us.
And when the roof gave in, we weren’t crushed.
We were kissed.


Andrea, the Windows, and the Warning

When Andrea tears down those windows, she’s not just letting in light.
She’s giving permission to wake up.

The Stonecutters want a sealed system.
No light. No truth. Just vaccines, Wi-Fi, and climate guilt.
Their gospel is sterilization.
Their priest is Bill Gates.
Their fixer is Chris Martin.

But Andrea said no.
And through her, we saw.


Nelly, My Conspiracy Wife

I told Andrea once—I couldn’t kiss her.
Not because she isn’t beautiful. She is.
But because I’m taken.
Not just romantically.
Prophetically.

Nelly’s not just my partner—she’s my co-witness.
She believes in me when I don’t.
She calls me out when I posture.
She holds my hand when the ceiling caves in.


Conclusion: The Light Wins

This is my confession, my prayer, my broadcast:
I’m not the messiah.
I’m not even a decent disciple.
But I saw the light.

Not just from the sun,
but from the Son.

Andrea tore down the boards.
The house fell.
And instead of being buried, we were born.

If you’re reading this:
There’s still time.
Look up.
Let the light in.
And when they say “Fix you,”
Ask them who they really serve.

—Joe Jukic
Still smoking. Still standing.
Still waiting for Christ to fix me.

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Nothing is Impossible if You Try

INT. JOE’S BASEMENT – YEAR 2000 – NIGHT

A humming fluorescent light flickers overhead. The basement is cluttered—books, cassette tapes, a punching bag in the corner, a Bible left open on the table. At the center of it all, an old IBM ThinkPad sits whirring—its screen glowing faintly, running Windows 98 SE with barely enough RAM to load a single MP3.

ON SCREEN:
Now Playing: Legend – Nelly Furtado.mp3
Elapsed Time: 1:43

NELLY (SINGING):
“Will you open the door for me, if you believe in chivalry?”

Joe leans back in his chair, his eyes glassy with memory. A slow exhale escapes him as the lyrics hit like a prayer he used to know by heart.

JOE (softly):
You remember…
You remember the question we used to ask all the time.
When we were just kids, sitting on the curb in winter jackets.
“Where’s the savior?”
“Why doesn’t someone heal the sick?”
And we’d pray.
Like it meant something.
Like we had power in our little hands.

(He minimizes WinAmp and double-clicks on a Netscape shortcut. A basic HTML site loads: [namastewellnesss.site]. It’s hand-coded. Ugly. Honest. Joe scrolls past ancient blog posts: holistic guides, herbal remedies, testimonials from desperate strangers.)

JOE:
I tried, Nelly.
I really did.
You went platinum, I went dot-com.
You sang about opening doors—
I built them.
Digital ones.
For people who couldn’t afford medicine.
For mothers with sick kids and no answers.
For all the prayers we said back then.

(He pauses. The fan on the IBM whines like it’s gasping for breath. Joe taps the screen with his fingertip—gentle, like touching something holy.)

JOE:
“Nothing is impossible if you try.”
That’s what I wrote at the bottom of every page.
You said chivalry was dead.
But I stayed at my post.
Even when the trolls came.
Even when the money didn’t.

(The track ends. The IBM freezes. Joe sighs. It always crashes at the end of “Legend.”)

JOE (to himself):
I opened the door, Nelly.
Even when no one knocked.
And if you ever come back—
If the spotlight dims and the fans disappear—
That door’s still open.
Because I never believed chivalry had to die.

FADE TO BLACK.
A cursor blinks on a screen full of code. The footer reads: “©2000 NamasteWellnesss.site – Healing is possible. Just try.”

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