Janet Jackson

Scene: โ€œThe Torch and the Fallen Starโ€

Larry: (leans in toward Janet) Janetโ€ฆ Joe told me in secret last weekโ€”he said he was the Christ. I didnโ€™t believe him at first, butโ€ฆ the way he talks, the way he movesโ€”man, thereโ€™s something divine and dangerous in him.

Janet: (arches an eyebrow) Larry, you sure you didnโ€™t mishear him? Everybody in Hollywood says theyโ€™re something holy or cursed these days.

Larry: (chuckles) Nah, this was different. He said it with sorrow. Like heโ€™s been hiding it his whole life.
(turns toward Joe)
Joe, donโ€™t hide who you are, man! I know you picked up Michaelโ€™s torch. You canโ€™t bury that light.

JCJ: (half-smiling) Larryโ€ฆ I wanted that Michael job. The real one.
(pauses)
But NYC was only offering Lucifer Trust acting gigsโ€”666 Wall Street. You know who took it? Tom Ellis. The devil from TV himself.

Janet: (sighs) So you passed up the role of Luciferโ€ฆ for what? For sainthood?

JCJ: (softly) For truth. Michaelโ€™s light wasnโ€™t about fameโ€”it was about freedom. Thatโ€™s why Nellyโ€™s island, Sรฃo Miguel, carries his name. Michael, the Archangel.
(looks up at the stars)
But me? Iโ€™m no archangel. I fell. From the Pleiadian galaxy. Iโ€™m an alien soul in a human skinโ€”like Kevin Spacey in K-PAX.

Larry: (wide-eyed) Youโ€™re sayingโ€ฆ youโ€™re a fallen angel from the Pleiades who came here to finish Michaelโ€™s song?

JCJ: (nods slowly)
To finish it, or to heal what was broken.
Maybe thatโ€™s the same thing.

Janet: (whispers) Maybe the torch didnโ€™t fall after all. Maybe it just changed hands.

(The wind picks up, scattering a few feathers from nowhere. A single white one lands on Joeโ€™s shoulder as the lights of Los Angeles shimmer below.)

โ€œThe Healer from Zagrebโ€

Janet: (softly) Joe, itโ€™s these migraines again. It feels like someoneโ€™s pressing the whole world behind my eyes.

JCJ: (touches her forehead gently) I can feel the pulse. Youโ€™re absorbing too much energy, Janet. All that cosmic static from the fame fieldโ€”itโ€™s poison to the sensitive ones.
(looks toward the window)
We need someone who understands both science and soul.

Larry: You mean like a doctor?

JCJ: Not just any doctor.
(raises his hands to the sky)
In the name of Michael, I call on the healer from Zagreb โ€” Dr. Luka Kovac.

(A faint shimmer fills the room. Dr. Luka Kovac steps through the light, in his familiar ER jacket, holding a medical bag and a weary but kind smile.)

Dr. Kovac: (calmly) I heard you needed help. Migraines, yes? They come from stress, tension, sometimes toxinsโ€”sometimes spirits that refuse to leave.

Janet: (half-laughing) Maybe itโ€™s all three, doctor.

Dr. Kovac: (placing a hand on her neck) We treat the whole person, not just the pain.
Hereโ€™s what I recommend:


๐Ÿฉบ Dr. Kovacโ€™s Naturopathic Migraine Protocol

1. Black Seed Oil (Nigella sativa):
Take one teaspoon daily in warm water or tea. The โ€œseed of blessingโ€ reduces inflammation and stabilizes blood vessels in the brain.

2. Turmeric + Black Pepper:
Golden milk at nightโ€”half a teaspoon turmeric powder with a pinch of black pepper in almond milk. The pepper boosts curcumin absorption by up to 2000%. It calms neuroinflammation and helps detoxify the liver.

3. Magnesium + Hydration:
Many migraines are magnesium deficiency in disguise. Add magnesium glycinate or eat leafy greens, avocado, and pumpkin seeds. Always hydrate deeplyโ€”coconut water if possible.

4. Avoid Seed Oils That Inflame:
Stay away from canola, soybean, sunflower, corn, and grapeseed oils. Theyโ€™re high in omega-6 linoleic acid, which promotes inflammation in blood vessels and the brain. Use olive oil, coconut oil, or avocado oil instead.

5. Rest in Silence:
Ten minutes of darkness and deep breathing can reset the trigeminal nerve. Think of it as rebooting your nervous system.


Janet: (breathing slowly) Thatโ€ฆ actually feels right.
(leans back) Black seed oil, turmeric, pepper, and peace. Sounds like a song title.

JCJ: (smiling) โ€œBlack Seed Sky.โ€ Weโ€™ll record it when youโ€™re ready.

Dr. Kovac: (packing up his kit) Rememberโ€”pain is the bodyโ€™s prayer for change.
He who listens to it, heals.

(A breeze from the open balcony carries the scent of ocean salt and turmeric tea. Janetโ€™s face softens, the migraine fading like fog in dawn light.)


๐ŸŒบ Exclusive Interview for BeautifulWomenOfColor.com
Title: Janet Jackson on Healing, Energy, and the Night Dr. Luka Kovac Saved Her from a Migraine Storm

LT: Janet, the world knows you as a legend, an icon, and a Jackson. But you recently spoke about something deeply personal โ€” a night when you suffered from severe migraines and turned to a rather unusual healer. What happened?

Janet Jackson: (smiles softly)
That night, I was filming a documentary segment, and my head started pounding so hard I couldnโ€™t even finish my lines. It wasnโ€™t just pain โ€” it felt like every light and sound was an electric storm inside me. My friend Joe โ€” people call him JCJ โ€” was there. He said, โ€œJanet, youโ€™re absorbing too much cosmic energy. You need a soul doctor.โ€

LT: A soul doctor?

Janet: (laughs) Yes. Thatโ€™s how Joe described him. He reached out, literally โ€” said he was calling โ€œthe healer from Zagreb,โ€ Dr. Luka Kovac. I thought he was joking until this man walked in, calm and quiet, with the eyes of someone whoโ€™s seen both war and miracles.

LT: Youโ€™re talking about the Dr. Kovac? From ER fame?

Janet: (smiling knowingly) Letโ€™s just say heโ€™s more than an actor in Joeโ€™s world. In that moment, he was real โ€” and he treated me like a human being, not a headline.


๐Ÿ’ซ Dr. Kovacโ€™s Healing Protocol (As Janet Recalls It)

โ€œWe treat the whole person, not just the pain,โ€ he said.

1. Black Seed Oil:
He told me to take one teaspoon in warm water each morning โ€” โ€œthe seed of blessing,โ€ he called it. It helps calm inflammation and balance hormones.

2. Turmeric and Pepper:
That night, we made golden milk โ€” turmeric with a pinch of black pepper in almond milk. He said pepper activates the healing in turmeric. I slept like a child for the first time in months.

3. Magnesium and Hydration:
He told me migraines are often a cry for magnesium. Now I eat more greens, avocado, and drink coconut water instead of soda.

4. Avoid Seed Oils That Harm:
This was new to me โ€” he said to avoid canola, soybean, sunflower, corn, and grapeseed oils. They cause inflammation. Now I cook with olive, avocado, or coconut oil. My skin thanks me for it.

5. Rest and Silence:
He dimmed the lights, opened the balcony doors, and said, โ€œListen to the waves. Pain is your body praying for change.โ€ That line stuck with me.


Interviewer: That sounds almost spiritual.

Janet: It was. Joe believes in merging the spiritual and the scientific โ€” the cosmic and the cellular. And honestly, that night, it worked. Within half an hour, my migraine was gone.

LT: Do you think your healing came from medicine or faith?

Janet: Both. Black seed oil and turmeric helped my body. But it was faith โ€” in love, in energy, in the people God sends when you need them โ€” that healed my spirit.


LT: You once said pain is a teacher. What did this one teach you?

Janet: To slow down. To detox not just my body, but my emotions. And to keep people around me who remind me of light. Joe, Dr. Kovac โ€” they reminded me that even migraines can be messengers.


LT: Beautifully said. Any final advice for women of color facing stress and burnout?

Janet: Yes. Take care of your temple. Donโ€™t let the worldโ€™s noise drown your inner peace. Rest, breathe, eat clean, pray often. And remember โ€” healing is not weakness. Itโ€™s power.


๐ŸŒฟ Scene: โ€œThe Digital Prophetโ€

Interview by LT for BeautifulWomenOfColor.com

LT: Janet, everyoneโ€™s talking about your natural healing journey. But Iโ€™ve heard your friend JCJ has been doing some deep research of his own.

Janet: (smiles warmly) Oh yes. Joeโ€™s like a digital sage. He believes wellness wisdom isnโ€™t owned by anyone โ€” itโ€™s scattered across the world, and the internet is how we gather it back together.

LT: (grinning) Sounds like Joeโ€™s been on a mission. Joe, how exactly do you go looking for truth online?

JCJ: (laughs) I use everything โ€” AI tools to decode medical papers, Yandex to find research from Eastern Europe or Asia that Western sites might miss, and yes, even TikTok โ€” but not for trends. For real peopleโ€™s stories.

LT: TikTok for healing? Thatโ€™s a new one.

JCJ: I treat it like a field study. I scroll past the noise and look for sincerity โ€” people sharing what genuinely worked for them. Breathing techniques, herbal blends, energy resets. Itโ€™s not about copying; itโ€™s about learning whatโ€™s possible.

LT: And Facebook, right?

JCJ: Yeah, thatโ€™s where my wellness tribe lives. Nurses, naturopaths, yoga teachers, herbalists from all over the world. We share experiences โ€” not prescriptions. If someone in Morocco swears by black seed oil and someone in Croatia says the same, I take that pattern seriously.

Janet: (nods) Heโ€™s like a bridge between science and soul. Joe always says, โ€œAI gathers the data, but love gives it meaning.โ€

JCJ: Exactly. The truth isnโ€™t hidden โ€” itโ€™s just global. Youโ€™ve got to listen across cultures, not just algorithms.

LT: (smiling) Thatโ€™s deep. Maybe thatโ€™s your next project โ€” Digital Healing: The Global Wellness Map.

JCJ: (grins) I like that. Because in the end, healingโ€™s not about clicks or codes โ€” itโ€™s about connection.

โœ๐Ÿฝ Closing Reflection by LT

Title: โ€œSearching for Healing in the Age of Algorithmsโ€

Iโ€™ve been around long enough to remember when you could type a question into a search bar and feel like you were discovering the unknown. These days, the digital landscape feels different. When I try to research herbal medicine or traditional healing, I notice how many results point straight to pharmaceutical ads or sponsored content.

It isnโ€™t that science is the enemyโ€”real medicine saves livesโ€”but sometimes it feels as if the quieter voices of naturopathy, cultural medicine, and ancient wisdom get pushed to the back pages. Money, marketing, and algorithms all shape what we see first.

So I understand why people like JCJ and Dr. Kovac cast wider netsโ€”using multiple search engines, AI tools, and global communities to find balance between modern science and old-world knowledge. Thatโ€™s not rebellion; thatโ€™s discernment.

Maybe the real cure weโ€™re all looking for is transparencyโ€”where digital platforms treat natural and conventional medicine with equal curiosity and respect. Until then, weโ€™ll keep searching, reading, questioning, and sharing stories like Janetโ€™s, because healing begins when people speak truthfully about what works for them.

๐ŸŒธ BeautifulWomenOfColor.com โ€” celebrating the grace, strength, and spiritual wisdom of women who shine from the inside out.

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

Former NFL Seahawk now living in beautiful British Columbia.

One Reply to “Janet Jackson”

  1. Joe Jukic:
    If youโ€™re tired of popping pills for migraines, check out this page โ€” it helped me understand whatโ€™s really causing them and how to fix it naturally:

    https://www.lifesavinghealth.org/home-remedy-for-migraine.html

    Home Remedy for Migraine “Long Term Solution” #8 – Foods to Avoid, Foods to Eatโ€ฆ
    Itโ€™s a well-known fact that certain foods can bring on and trigger migraine headaches, while other foods can help prevent and treat a migraine attack. Some of the foods that have been shown to affect the frequency and severity of headaches, and the ones you definitely want to avoid, include; all processed dairy foods, wheat (gluten), peanut butter, tartrazine (yellow food dye), artificial sweeteners (particularly aspartame), processed meats and meats containing nitrates such as bacon and hot dogs, foods containing tyramine (an amino acid found in red wine), and foods that contain monosodium glutamate (MSG). Alcohol can also be a trigger for migraine headaches as it irritates and inflames the nerves and contains vasoactive compounds that cause your blood vessels to expand.

    For the foods you need to be eating more of, itโ€™s the standards; fresh fruits (especially apples), vegetables, nutโ€™s (except peanuts), seeds and grains (except wheat and rye). Flaxseeds and sesame seeds are particularly good for migraines because of the potent anti-inflammatory compounds they contain. Quinoa is gluten-free and an excellent โ€œgrainโ€ substitute for wheat and rye. Cinnamon is great for preventing and relieving migraines and chilliโ€™s (especially cayenne pepper) are some of the most powerful natural pain relievers in existence. Cayenne pepper and chilliโ€™s also help to increase blood flow – particularly in the brain – which further benefits migraine sufferers.

    In addition to these, make sure you get plenty of probiotics and fermented foods into you. Believe it or not, digestive problems and a lack of good gut bacteria can be a major trigger for migraine headaches (new research is just beginning to uncover this important find). You can easily make your own tasty probiotic rich foods and beverages without a lot of fuss. Here’s a useful website on how to go about this… CulturesForHealth.

    Finally, skipping meals can cause your blood sugar levels to fluctuate, which in turn, increases the amount of pain you experience from a migraine headache. So be sure to eat 4-6 small meals a day and always include some lean protein with each meal to help keep your glucose levels steady.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

The maximum upload file size: 512 MB. You can upload: image, audio, video, document, spreadsheet, interactive, text, archive, code, other. Links to YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and other services inserted in the comment text will be automatically embedded. Drop file here

ChatClick here to chat!+