
Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warrior
Bio
Thank you for reading my work. Feel free to contact me with your thoughts or if you want to chat. [email protected]
Stories (1384)
Filter by community
Cynthia Lennon and the Cost of Loving a Beatle
Cynthia Powell was born in Blackpool on 10 September 1939, the youngest of three children. Her mother, Lillian, had been evacuated from Liverpool at the start of the Second World War, along with many pregnant women seeking safety from German air raids. Cynthia spent only her earliest days in Blackpool before the family relocated to Hoylake on the Wirral Peninsula, a quieter, middle‑class area where she grew up .
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warriora day ago in Humans
John Lennon And Blackpool: A Life Threaded Through A Seaside Town
John Lennon’s connection to Blackpool begins long before the Beatles, long before the cameras and the roar of theatre crowds. It starts in the small, bright details of childhood holidays, in the smell of sea air and the glow of variety‑show stages, and it runs forward into one of the most painful scenes of his early life. Yet the story does not stop there. Blackpool also stands quietly at the origin of his first great love, his first wife, and the mother of his first child. The town becomes a kind of hidden axis in his life: a place of early joy, a site of rupture, a stage of triumph, and the birthplace of the woman who would share his formative years of fame.
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warriora day ago in History
The Fragile Line Between Perception And Reality: How The No‑Contact Trend Risks Creating New Cycles Of Estrangement
Estrangement between parents and adult children has become a defining feature of modern family life. Social media is filled with stories of people cutting ties, setting hard boundaries, and declaring themselves free from “toxic” parents. Some of these stories are rooted in real trauma. Many people endured violence, neglect, or emotional cruelty, and distance is the only path to safety. Their experiences deserve respect, protection, and support. Yet the broader cultural trend is more complicated. A growing number of estrangements appear to be driven less by objective harm and more by subjective interpretation, emotional immaturity, or the influence of therapeutic language that encourages people to view discomfort as danger.
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warriora day ago in Humans
The Long Shadow Of Overprotection: How Parenting of Millenials Shaped a Generation’s Relationship with Responsibility
Cultural habits rarely appear out of nowhere. They grow slowly, shaped by family life, social expectations, and the emotional climate of a generation. Many commentators have argued that millennials struggle with accountability, often leaning toward external explanations when life becomes difficult. While this claim is sometimes exaggerated, it does have roots in a deeper story about how they were raised. The boomer generation, shaped by its own history of strict discipline and survival‑based values, often swung toward overprotection when raising their children. That shift created a complicated legacy for millennials, one that still influences how they handle responsibility, conflict, and self‑reflection.
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warriora day ago in Humans
A College Degree Is About Far More Than Job Training
A college degree is often described as a ticket to better employment, a credential that opens doors, or a practical step toward financial stability. Those things matter, and they matter a great deal, especially for students who carry the weight of family expectations or economic pressure. Yet the deeper truth is that college has never been only about preparing for a job. It is a long, transformative passage into adulthood, a place where the mind stretches, the heart widens, and the self begins to take shape in ways that cannot be measured by a résumé. The value of a college education reaches far beyond technical training. It shapes how a person thinks, how they relate to the world, and how they understand themselves.
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warriora day ago in Humans
When the World Turns: The Passport as a Lifeline in Uncertain Times
A passport is one of the most important documents a person can hold, not because it symbolizes travel or privilege, but because it protects your freedom of movement when the world becomes unpredictable. Many people in the United States think of a passport as something you only need for vacations or special trips. In reality, it is a basic tool of personal safety. A passport is one of the simplest and strongest forms of protection a person can hold, not because it symbolizes travel or privilege, but because it preserves the basic freedom to move when life becomes unpredictable. Many people in the United States think of a passport as something used only for vacations or special trips, yet history shows that a passport is far more important than that. It is a lifeline. It is the document that proves your identity across borders, allows you to leave your homeland legally, and gives you the ability to reach safety if conditions around you change suddenly. No country is immune to conflict, unrest, or rapid social breakdown. Things can turn without warning, and when they do, the people who are able to leave safely are usually the ones who already have their documents in order.
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warriora day ago in Humans
Rising Above the Noise: Why Meeting Hostility With Grace Matters in Public Life
Rising Above the Noise: Why Meeting Hostility With Grace Matters in Public Life Public life in the United States has become loud, tense, and full of sharp edges. People speak past one another instead of to one another, and disagreements quickly turn into battles over identity and belonging. In this atmosphere, many people who lean toward openness, compassion, and inclusion find themselves struggling to match the intensity of those who speak with certainty, anger, or absolute conviction. It often feels as if the loudest voices set the tone for the entire country, even when they represent only a small part of the population. This imbalance creates a sense of exhaustion for people who want to build bridges rather than burn them.
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warriora day ago in Humans
The Contradiction at the Heart of Anti–Political Correctness in the United States
A steady and unmistakable pattern runs through American public life. The people who shout the loudest about the dangers of political correctness often become the first to demand silence, outrage, or punishment when someone challenges their own beliefs. This contradiction is not a small detail or a misunderstanding. It reveals something deeper about how people think about power, identity, and public conversation in the United States. Many Americans say they dislike political correctness because they believe it limits free speech. They argue that it forces people to hide their real opinions and makes honest conversation impossible. But when we look closely at how anti‑PC voices behave, we see something very different. They often want freedom for themselves, but not for others. They want to speak without consequences, but they do not want to hear criticism. They want to challenge others, but they do not want to be challenged. This tension shapes much of today’s public debate and explains why conversations about language and respect have become so heated.
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warriora day ago in Humans
The Clinton Record: A Fierce Examination of Power, Secrecy, and the Women Caught in the Crossfire
Hillary Clinton is cut from the same cloth as Donald Trump. Don't for a minute think otherwise. She only succeeds at being more intelligent and sneaky than Trump. But at their core, they are the same.
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warrior2 days ago in History
Truth, Expansion, and the Maturity of the Soul
Truth, Expansion, and the Maturity of the Soul Human beings have always lived between two great forces: the need for truth, which anchors us, and the need for expansion, which pulls us toward growth. Every spiritual tradition, every philosophical lineage, every era of human history has wrestled with these twin impulses. They are not opposites. They are partners. But when they fall out of balance, the consequences are profound.
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warrior2 days ago in Humans
The Cornish Pastie: A History, A Craft, and the Law That Guards Its Name
Cornwall rises from the sea with a kind of ancient certainty, its cliffs carved by wind and salt, its moors stretching into a quiet, haunted distance. Life here has always been shaped by endurance. The land is beautiful, but it is not gentle. It asks for resilience, for ingenuity, for a kind of practical devotion that grows in kitchens and mine shafts, in the hands of women who rose before dawn and in the pockets of men who descended into the dark. Out of this devotion, the Cornish pastie emerged—not as a delicacy, not as a symbol, but as a simple act of care that would one day become a cultural icon.
By Julie O'Hara - Author, Poet and Spiritual Warrior2 days ago in History











