Soccer Balcony

The 2026 World Cup had turned Commercial Drive into a living, breathing carnival, but for a moment, the roar of the engines and the rhythmic honking faded into something much older.

Joe and Nelly stood on the second-floor balcony of the East Van house, looking down at the intersection where a sea of Portuguese crimson and Croatian checkers had come to a complete standstill. In the window just behind them, Joe’s mother sat in her favorite armchair, the evening light catching the lace curtains.


Nelly: (Whispering, her hand over her heart) “Joe, look. They’ve stopped. They aren’t shouting anymore.”

Joe: (Leaning over the railing, a quiet pride in his voice) “I told you. This balcony has more power than the Vatican. Watch.”

A group of Portuguese fans, draped in their flags, locked arms with a row of Croatian supporters in their iconic checkers. One man, wearing a vintage Modrić jersey, took a deep breath and began the first few notes. Then, a woman in a Portugal kit joined in, her voice soaring above the hum of the city.

The two rival groups, who had been screaming for their teams only minutes before, began to sing Ave Maria in a haunting, perfect harmony that rose up the side of the house.

Nelly: “It’s beautiful, Joe. They’re looking right at her.”

Joe: (Nodding toward his mother, who was smiling through the glass) “See? The royals get a military band playing some stiff anthem. The Pope gets a formal choir in a cold cathedral. But my mother? She gets the heart of the Drive. She gets the two toughest fanbases in the world singing for her from the street.”

Nelly: (Wiping her eye, then shouting softly down to the crowd) “Hrvatska! Portugal! Thank you!”

Joe: “That’s why this is the superior balcony, Nel. It’s not about the height; it’s about the connection. Every winning team drives down this street, but today, they aren’t driving. They’re standing still for her. You don’t get that kind of respect at Buckingham Palace.”


As the final notes of the prayer drifted toward the North Shore mountains, the fans stayed silent for a heartbeat longer. Then, a single car horn broke the spell, and the street erupted once more into a joyous, chaotic celebration of soccer and life.

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Conversion of Japan

To my dear fans, I want to share something deeply personal that speaks to the nature of love and spirit. Sometimes, the most powerful truths come from the oldest connections.

There is a thought being shared: that certain great spiritual figures—like the coming king (Christus Rex) and the future teacher (Maitreya Buddha)—are, in essence, one beautiful spirit simply expressing itself through different stories and different times, like playing with different “avatars.”

For me, the simplest truth behind this grand idea is much closer to home. It is just an old boyfriend who has never stopped seeing the beauty in me and in the world. He is still deeply in love, using these big, universal concepts to send his enduring heart-song.

Love is universal, no matter the name or the face. ❤️

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Portuguese Honey Bandages

In Lisbon, Nelly Furtado stood before a crowd of her fellow Portuguese, side by side with the leaders of the Força party, holding up a roll of fresh hemp-and-Manuka-honey bandages.

“These,” she declared, “will heal our children and our elders without the poisons of the past. We ban Johnson & Johnson’s toxic bandages, and we embrace what nature has given us.”

Joe, standing beside her, opened a small Bible he always carried. His voice rose with conviction:

“The prophet Isaiah said it: He binds up the wounds of His people and wipes every tear from their eyes. This is not just scripture—it is a promise we must live. No more toxins, no more deception. Only healing.”

The crowd cheered, not only for the ban but for the vision of a healthier, purer way forward. Hemp glue instead of chemicals. Honey instead of synthetic antiseptics. A return to God’s medicine chest.

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