Juilee Parag Parkhi
Writer. Filmmaker. Observer of the unseen.
Juilee Parag Parkhi is a writer and filmmaker whose work lives in the quiet space between thought and feeling — where stories are not always spoken, but deeply understood.
Through Juilee Journal, she creates reflective essays, poetry, and cinematic narratives that explore human psychology, emotional landscapes, and the subtle patterns of everyday life. Her writing is both intimate and expansive — rooted in personal observation, yet resonating with a universal familiarity.
There is a stillness to her work. A pause. A sense that each piece is not trying to explain life, but to sit beside it.
Raised in India, Juilee draws from lived experience, cultural nuance, and an instinct for noticing what often goes unarticulated — the unspoken dynamics in relationships, the weight of silent expectations, the inner dialogues we carry but rarely share.
As a filmmaker, her storytelling is inherently visual. Each piece unfolds like a scene — textured, atmospheric, and quietly immersive. Her visual essays aim to blur the boundary between cinema and literature, creating narratives that are not just read, but felt.
Her work seeks recognition — of self, of truth, of the quiet transformations that shape us over time.
A Note From Me
I began writing because there were thoughts that wouldn’t leave —
questions that stayed longer than conversations,
feelings that didn’t quite belong anywhere else.
Over time, writing became a way of understanding — not just the world, but myself within it.
Juilee Journal is that space.
A Place of reflection and presence. If something here feels familiar, it probably already existed within you. I just happened to write it down.
Work & Themes
- Human emotions and inner psychology
- Relationships, boundaries, and personal growth
- Cultural conditioning and identity
- Quiet observations from everyday life
- Cinematic and visual storytelling
Philosophy
In a world that rewards noise and speed,
this work chooses stillness.
Because sometimes,
what changes us the most
doesn’t arrive loudly.
It settles — slowly, quietly —
until we finally see it.
Connect
Website: juileejournal.com
By Juilee Parag Parkhi

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