top of page


When The Hearth Held Our Stories
For most of human history, story was not simply entertainment. It was not a product, a genre, or something consumed in isolation. Story was woven into the fabric of home and community. It lived at the hearth. It was repeated until it shaped memory. It carried warning, meaning, identity, and endurance together. To tell a story was both an act of responsibility and participation in human heritage. When the world darkened, people did not turn away from story. They clung to it. S

Jillian Aurora
Jan 234 min read


Story as Human Heritage
Across millennia, long before borders or bureaucracies, humans gathered around something warm and shared. A fire. A table. A voice. The hearth was not only a place of heat but a site of continuity. It was a place where knowledge, memory, and meaning were kept alive when the world outside was uncertain or hostile. Story lived there. It always has. Humans told have stories in times of abundance as well as scarcity, some to teach or remember, others simply for pleasure, humor, o

Jillian Aurora
Jan 185 min read


The New Year Was Never About Renewal
For a long time, I accepted the New Year the way most of us are taught to: a clean line between what was and what might be. A moment of collective pause. A symbolic beginning. The story is nice. But the narrative never felt quite right. What we now call the New Year did not emerge from nature, intuition, or spiritual insight. It emerged from administration. From political necessity. From an empire trying to get its house in order. When Rome Lost Control of Time—and Took It Ba

Jillian Aurora
Dec 31, 20255 min read


Where the Wild Still Walks: Romania’s Bear Dance
When Winter Breaks Open There is a kind of quiet in northeastern Romania that feels older than anything else around it—a winter hush thick enough to swallow sound. And then, as the year tilts toward its end, that stillness cracks with a distinct Romanian beat. Drums thunder in the air, bells shiver, and the whole village wakes as the Bear Dance pushes through the streets like weather rolling in from another age. People often describe the first sight of it as massive brown hid

Jillian Aurora
Dec 8, 20257 min read


Sitting With the Ache of It All
I’ve been carrying a heavy mix of emotions lately. Back home, in the streets where I grew up, innocent and hardworking Mexican immigrants are being taken into big unmarked trucks — disappeared under the cover of night. Families are left wondering where their loved one is and if they will ever see them again. Dreams are erased. People who have built lives among people they thought were friends are treated like they don’t belong anymore. Watching those videos makes something in

Jillian Aurora
Dec 7, 20252 min read


A Winter Spell in the Carpathians: Christmas Markets in Brașov
There are cities that decorate for Christmas, and then there is Brașov — a place that seems to exhale winter enchantment from its medieval soul. As December settles over the Carpathians, the old town begins its transformation. Lights unfurl across rooftops, garlands drape between centuries-old walls, and the entire landscape takes on the soft glow of a fairytale. Romanians put serious, loving effort into creating a festive world, and you can feel that intention in every illum

Jillian Aurora
Nov 30, 20254 min read


Shadows Before Winter: Halloween’s Forgotten Twin in Romania
When autumn arrives in Transylvania, the air grows sharp and metallic, and the forests shed their color until only the stone of the mountains seems alive. Smoke rises from the first hearth fires, curling above tiled roofs and lingering with its sweet scent in the cold. In the West, this is the season of Halloween I am familiar with - a celebration of ghosts, costumes, and death. In Romania, the same chill carries something older. There are no pumpkin lanterns or suburban tric

Jillian Aurora
Oct 31, 20254 min read


The Strigoi: Restless Souls of the Romanian Hearth
Before the word “vampire” ever reached Western Europe and long before Bram Stoker turned Transylvania into a gothic legend, Romanians were already telling stories about the strigoi — spirits that slipped between the worlds of the living and the dead. These were not imagined monsters from distant castles but familiar faces: neighbors, relatives, and townspeople whose souls could not find rest. In traditional belief, a strigoi was not born from evil so much as imbalance. It was

Jillian Aurora
Oct 28, 20254 min read


The Storyteller Who Chased Immortality: Corneliu Țepeluș and the Living Soul of Romania
The Keeper of the Flame In every culture, there are keepers of the flame—those who carry the memory of a people across generations, adapting it to new languages, new screens, and new worlds. In Romania, one of those keepers is Corneliu Țepeluș, a filmmaker, storyteller, and cultural ambassador whose life has been shaped by the timeless human pursuit of immortality—not the kind that denies death, but the kind that ensures meaning endures. His work bridges the mystical and the

Jillian Aurora
Oct 27, 20254 min read


The Black Church of Brașov: A Testament of Fire and Faith
In the heart of Brașov’s old town, framed by the Carpathian foothills, stands a monument that has watched over centuries of change: wars, fires, reformations, and rebirth. Locals call it Biserica Neagră — The Black Church. Its stone walls rise like memory itself, weathered and immovable, carrying the spirit of a people who refused to vanish. A Church Born of the Saxons Construction of the Black Church began around 1380, when Brașov, known then as Kronstadt, was one of the mos

Jillian Aurora
Oct 24, 20253 min read


The German Story in Transylvania: Builders of Towers and Time
Walk through any Transylvanian town and you’ll find echoes of another world such as fortified churches, cobbled squares, pastel guild houses, Latin inscriptions, and names like Kronstadt, Hermannstadt, and Schäßburg. These are traces of the Transylvanian Saxons, the German settlers who came nearly nine centuries ago and shaped the cultural heart of the region. Arrival of the Saxons The story begins in the 12th century, when the Hungarian kings invited German colonists to sett

Jillian Aurora
Oct 19, 20253 min read


The Toad
Keeper of the damp earth, you rise from mud and moonlight, skin glistening like the memory of rain, eyes heavy with ancient knowing. You are not only lowly, but a vessel: the one who carries transformation in your dewey flesh. Your body bears the mark of both realms, water and soil, birth and decay, reminding us that life itself is a cycle of dissolving and return. Once, they feared your touch, said you carried curses in your skin, poison in your breath, that witches hid your

Jillian Aurora
Oct 16, 20251 min read


The Night of Wolf: Saint Andrew’s Eve in Transylvania
In Transylvania, as November dies and winter gathers on the hills, there comes a night when the old beliefs stir again. Between November 29 and 30, the feast of Saint Andrew, the veil between worlds is said to thin. It is a time when wolves speak, spirits wander, and villagers once guarded their homes with garlic and prayer. Known as Noaptea Sfântului Andrei, this night marks one of Romania’s most mysterious folk observances, a blend of Christian feast and pre-Christian ritua

Jillian Aurora
Oct 15, 20254 min read


Oktoberfest in Romania: Bavarian Spirit in Carpathian Lands
In the shadow of medieval churches and fortified towers, one might least expect Bavarian-style beer tents, oompah bands, and lederhosen—but in Romania, especially in Transylvania, Oktoberfest has found a new home. What began as a festive export has become part of how German heritage communities, cities, and event planners articulate cultural identity, hospitality, and connection to Europe. From Munich to Everywhere: The Original Oktoberfest The first Oktoberfest was held on O

Jillian Aurora
Oct 12, 20253 min read


The Folklore of Sighișoara: Where Shadows and Stories Endure
Perched above the Târnava Mare River, the citadel of Sighișoara has never been only a Saxon fortress. Its towers, stairways, and houses carry stories that linger as strongly as the scent of woodsmoke in winter. Beyond the pastel facades and watchtowers, folklore has shaped the way this medieval town is remembered. Vlad Dracul and the Birthplace of Vlad Țepeș One of the most enduring legends is tied to the yellow house on Citadel Square, known as the Vlad Dracul House. Traditi

Jillian Aurora
Oct 10, 20253 min read


The Cat
Cat, watcher in the half-light, you move like a shadow that chose its own shape, fur humming with the memory of danger, eyes catching what the human heart refuses to see. You are not only graceful, but a mystery the one who waits, who sees before acting, who knows what silence conceals. Your stillness is not peace. It is a listening, a poised breath between worlds, the moment before truth startles into motion. Once, they feared you. They burned your kind for choosing solitud

Jillian Aurora
Oct 6, 20251 min read


The Legends of Bran: Between Fortress and Fantasy
Perched on a rocky outcrop at the edge of the Carpathians, Bran Castle looks as though it was built for legend. Its towers and courtyards rise out of the cliffs, watching over the mountain pass between Transylvania and Wallachia. For centuries, it stood as a sentinel of trade and defense — but today, it is most famous for the shadows it carries, the stories of vampires, queens, and secrets carved into stone. The Shadow of Dracula No legend clings more tightly to Bran than tha

Jillian Aurora
Oct 5, 20254 min read


The Bear
Bear, keeper of the deep earth, you move with the weight of mountains, fur thick with the silence of forests, claws carved from the roots of time. You are not only brute strength, but a guardian the one who stands watch when shadows draw near, the shield between the firelight and the devouring dark. Your breath clouds the cold air, reminding us that endurance and patience are also a form of power. In the old villages, your name was spoken like a prayer, your image painted on

Jillian Aurora
Oct 1, 20251 min read


The Wolf
Wolf, shadow of the forest, you move where men dare not linger, eyes burning with the fire of old banners, breath rising like smoke from forgotten battles. You are not only predator, but a guardian; the one who sees what others cannot. Your howl splits the mountain air, reminding us that exile and belonging are two faces of the same song. In the old tales, you walk beside the restless, sniffing out ghosts in the dark, yet you are also the shield, the teeth that turn away what

Jillian Aurora
Sep 29, 20251 min read
Where memory, meaning, and magic simmer
bottom of page