Remembering Julia

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It’s been difficult for me to talk about Julia’s decline and death. For the last few months, I have felt simultaneously wrenched and yet also numb. Silenced. Muted. It’s been too much to process. Too much to feel. Julia was such a large presence in my life. When I look around at her home, at her business, at all the things she left behind, I still can’t believe that she’s gone.

We didn’t exactly get on right away, Julia and I. When I first met her back in the year 1990, she was aloof, suspicious, and distrustful. I had just started dating her son and she wasn’t inclined to like me. I can still remember how she looked then. The skin on her face still had a dark-ish tinge about the sides, and she looked tired. She hadn’t yet learned how to heal herself, and so her demeanour was bitter and weary. When I said ‘hello’, she looked down at the ground and self-consciously patted her hair into place. I wondered how I, a young 20 year old girl, could possibly make her nervous.

As I look back now, I don’t think I made her nervous at all. Those gestures were merely a way for Julia to examine me more closely without appearing too obvious about it. In truth, she had most likely already made a judgment about me. Julia lived her life by following her gut instincts, and she trusted those explicitly. If she got a negative feeling about you, from something you said or did, that feeling would be exceptionally hard to shift. I don’t think I passed her test on that first day we met, but somehow, over the next three years, I did.

I knew that I had passed her test because, suddenly, out of the blue, she asked me to come help her at her health food store. She didn’t have to do that. By that time, I had been married to her son for almost a year and had just graduated from university. I was looking for work, and Julia said she could use some help. We figured we could help each other out. And so our humble journey together began.

If you worked for Julia at that time, you couldn’t help but respect her. Deep respect. Customers would come for miles to get her advice, and this was before she started selling her own Chinese herbal tinctures. They would ask her advice about which supplements to take, which foods to eat, which foods not to eat. She spoke with such intelligence and knowledge. I was in awe of her. One night, I sat at the dinner table with her, long after everyone else had left, and listened to her personal story. She was incredible. So smart, and yet so humble. A vulnerable little bird who hadn’t yet come into her power. I will always remember that special time.

In the years that followed, Julia and I worked more closely together. I became her right-hand man. I helped her manufacture her products. I answered email for her for years. We consulted with one another about her customers late at night, bouncing ideas off of one another. But make no mistake, it was always Julia who was in charge. It was she who made the decisions, and they were usually bang on.

And so it was very difficult for me, for all of us, when Julia began to decline. When her decisions stopped making sense. She would forget things, and Julia never forgot things. She, who had always been so sharp, began to do and say things that were definitely off. She forgot the names of common objects. She couldn’t tell what time of day it was. Long-time customers that had come to see her for years were suddenly forgotten. We would confer with one another. Is this normal? Should we be concerned?

It turns out, we needed to be concerned. The last five or six years have been tumultuous, to say the least. For, even as her memory slip-ups and judgment errors increased in number and severity, Julia never would accept that she had a problem. Up until the very end, she still believed that she was fully in control of herself. That she alone knew all the answers. She’d been deeply independent and distrustful of other people her entire life, so when we tried to place limits on her freedom, she could only ever see it as a personal attack. It was a very painful and difficult time.

Even when she was finally confined to a nursing home, she found a way to stay in charge. In her own mind, she was still going to work each day, and doing important things. She would tell the other patients that they needed to cleanse their liver. She would continually harass them for payment. “Where is your receipt?” she would demand. It was kind of funny, but it was also incredibly sad.

We finally lost Julia this past February. Although, in truth, we had already lost her years before. During our last visits with her in the nursing home, before the pandemic, I would watch her face, ask her questions. It was difficult to get her to sit still. She continued to believe she had work to do. That she was far too busy to sit and talk. And then, when the pandemic happened, visiting with her became almost impossible. During her last weeks, we had to watch her slowly decline over Zoom calls. She had lost the ability to swallow, and just withered away.

I feel privileged to have known, and been close to, such an incredible woman. I learned so much from her over the years. Many of her thousands of customers have told me the same. She inspired people. She changed lives. There are many pictures of her around our house, so I still ‘see’ her every day. I think of her often. I know that I will never forget her. She has left her mark on me, so she now comes along with me wherever I go, living through my eyes, and feeling through my heart.

If it is at all possible, I know she’s still having an impact, wherever she is. That’s just the kind of person that Julia was. Original. Exceptional. Unforgettable. I hope you rest peacefully, Julia.





About the Author: Rebecca Wong has a BA in English Literature from the University of Waterloo and has been working in the herbal business since 2000. She studied at the Ontario College of Traditional Chinese Medicine under respected authorities Paul Des Rosiers and Vu Le, and graduated from the East West School of Planetary Herbology under Michael Tierra. She received training as a yoga teacher at The Branches in Kitchener/Waterloo, and therapeutic yoga teacher training from the School for Somatic Soulwork under Deniz Aydoslu. She now teaches yoga for anxiety, depression and burnout at Rebecca's Restful Yoga Studio in Toronto.

13 thoughts on “Remembering Julia”

  1. Thanks for writing about Julia. I had a long unexpected conversation with her about a decade ago when I rang the shop from Ireland. Her herbal tinctures are the only ones I could find globally to help with serious gallbladder issues so she’s left us all something with her work and it’s great you are there now!

    1. Thank you, Mary! I’m so glad Julia’s tinctures were helpful for your serious gallbladder issues. We are fortunate that we still have her products to remember her by.

  2. Eileen Turner

    I am so sorry for your loss. Julia’s tinctures have been the only effective remedy for my gallbladder issues. So grateful that her products are a legacy that will continue to help people such as myself. Many thanks.

  3. Rebecca, thanks so much for the dedication to Julia. It is sad to hear she has passed on. We will miss her. Julia helped my husband, Jan Malloy through a terrible gall bladder issue when he was fighting cancer back in 2006. Without her then we would be without him now. I am grateful for her wisdom. He would visit with her on the phone and she explained things thoroughly to him giving him hope and the courage to fight for his life. He is suffering from diabetes now in his latter years. We are investigating using curcuma to help regulate his alc numbers rather than big pharma drugs. Any suggestions you have would be appreciated.

    1. Thank so much for your condolences. I love hearing stories about how helpful Julia was to her customers.:) As for your questions about your husband’s blood sugar, I have sent you an email with some suggestions. Let me know if you didn’t get it and I can re-send.

  4. Stephanie Sanchez

    Wow, I had no idea that she had passed away. Can you tell us how old she was when she passed?

    Just by chance, today, I was telling my friend who is suffering from her liver and gallbladder that she has to read this article by Julia. And then I saw your memorial.😔

    I first heard about her in 2002 from my Canadian friend ( I am from the US). This information has been a constant reference and helpful for me all these years. Even though I never met her, her work is still very much appreciated.

    But I am deeply sorry for your personal loss. Death is our great enemy. A thought that brings me comfort is being reunited with our loved ones.

    1. Thank you for your condolences. Julia will certainly be missed. She would have been 80 years old this summer.

  5. My condolences for your loss. My gallbladder problems have only ever been successfully treated by Julia’s tinctures. I’m so appreciative that her products will leave a lasting legacy and continue to benefit people like me.

  6. I was lucky enough to get her help via yourself and email almost a decade ago now. I’m still on my healing journey, but I would have needed organ removal years ago if not for her and you. What I loved the most is that even when I wanted to purchase extra things the two of you were honest with me and said, no, you don’t need that. Do this and your situation will clear up. Even when it didn’t make sense to me at the time, she was right! I’m thankful she was in the world and thankful that you are continuing her good work. God bless you all.

  7. What a beautiful tribute to Julia. I was telling a friend about her today and how her remedies and advice were responsible for me having the ability to get pregnant in 2000 and again in 2005. I looked her up and just found out she passed away. Julia was truly an incredible woman. I first came across an article she had written on endometriosis in 1997. I had been suffering for a few years and decided to contact her. She was amazing and asked me to come and see her and have a chat. I finally found relief in her advice. I am truly sorry for your loss but it looks like an amazing legacy.

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