Live and Let Live Blues Saga
Someday we will remember how to let each other grow.
A Live and Let Live Story
(spoken intro — soft cello, gentle piano, slow breath)
I grew up in a world that wanted everything neat, pressed, and proper
the strict 1950s, where girls wore shirts even when they didn’t want to,
and nobody talked about the things that mattered.
But even then, I was already slipping out of the seams.
I was the little girl in the front yard with the hose,
bare chested in my underwear, telling my mother,
“No mommy, I’m a baby, it’s okay.”

I didn’t know it then,
but that was the beginning of my philosophy:
live and let live.
It carried me through everything
through the Valley,
through the Greek Theatre summers,
through Motown hallways,

through the backseat of a van parked by the ocean,
through a marriage that made no sense on paper,
through having my boys, each their own universe.
I learned early that people come in every shape of spirit.
Gemini is one way.
Sweetie is another.
That other bird I almost brought home a whole different frequency.
My brother in Texas, my sons, the roadies, the limo drivers,
the strangers I danced beside at concerts all different.
And that’s what made the world turn.
Back then, difference wasn’t a threat.
It was a color,
a flavor,
a rhythm.
You could be barefoot and sunlit.

You could talk to strangers without fear.
You could dance in the aisles.
You could breathe.
But these are not those days.
Now people police each other.
They fear what they don’t understand.
They lose tolerance, humor, curiosity
the very things that make us human.
Everyone wants the world to match their shape,
their rules,
their fear.
But I still carry the old world inside me
the free one,
the curious one,
the one that lets people be who they are,
the one that knows humanity is a mosaic, not a mirror.

I am not old
I am original.
I am still that girl with the water hose saying,
“It’s okay. Let me be.”
And I still believe the world works best
when we let each other live.
Live and Let Live Blues
(song — bluesy country, cello + piano, slow dusk tempo)
Verse 1 — Then
Bare feet on warm pavement,
sunlight on my skin.
Back when folks let folks be folks,
and the world felt wide as wind.
Verse 2 — The Middle
We danced in open spaces,
talked to strangers just for fun.
Didn’t matter where you came from,
long as your heart could beat like a drum.

Verse 3 — Now
But these days feel tighter,
like the world forgot its song.
People scared of assorted colors,
quick to tell each other “Wrong.”

Verse 4 — The Question
So, I ask the sky at sundown,
in a cello low, bluesy tone:
When did “live and let live”
turn into “leave me alone”?

Verse 5 — The Truth
Still, I carry that old freedom,
like a lantern in my chest.
Cause the world turns best with difference —
that’s the part we all forget.

Verse 6 — The Shared Memory
Back then we danced with strangers,
didn’t matter where you came from.
We shared the night, we shared the laughter,
and the world beat like one drum.

Verse 7 — The Tightening
Now folks walk with their shoulders tight,
eyes down, hearts closed in.
Everybody scared of difference,
forgetting how to let life in.

Chorus
Live and let live
that’s the song we used to know.
Live and let live
like a river’s easy flow.
Someday we will remember
how to let each other grow.

Verse 8 — The Hope
Someday we will remember
what those days tried to give:
Not perfection, not agreement
just a chance to let folks
live and let live.


About the Creator
Vicki Lawana Trusselli
Welcome to My Portal
I am a storyteller. This is where memory meets mysticism, music, multi-media, video, paranormal, rebellion, art, and life.
I nursing, business, & journalism in college. I worked in the film & music industry in LA, CA.




Comments (1)
Love your content.