Julia Elaine Provencial’s stacked songs (some with unedited slurred words due to being nonverbal):

During the COVID-19 pandemic, I was looking at my cell phone and saw a US Soldier speaking to the public. This soldier said, “Sing”. So, I purchased an electric guitar from Wal-Mart. The sound was too loud for the rundown motel I was residing at for six months so I unplugged the guitar and played it that way. It sounded awesome, to me. I used the Dolby On APP which my adopted parent had told me about when I was a teenager. Stanley Anthony Tomyl said to me, “You know the words to every song. Maybe you could study your homework like that.” In my senior year of high school I was an evening student taking a college course in Word Processing. I am finally applying my skills towards my own business. I was the fastest typist in my senior class according to the keyboard teacher in high school. I bounced around between a couple high schools before graduation. I picked up work here and there. After graduation, I had a business in Kailua-Kona, Hawaii to work remotely. The 300 business cards were slate blue and read Kona Coast Word Processing. I wonder if anyone has those cards hanging around. Anyway, I sang most of these songs by just letting the words roll off of my tongue. Most of the songs were recorded once and documented online via social media such as SoundCloud and Audiomack. I do not know how to play the guitar. I do not know how to write music or read music. I simply did what the soldier said to do. At the time of being at the motel in Lumberton, North Carolina I went to the emergency room because I was having a medical problem. My body temperature had dropped to 94.2. My face was ashen grey. I thought I was going to die. One of the times I went to the ER the doctor’s name was Dr. Singh. How ironic! I recorded more than 100 songs all of my own words.