OPINION ON REMAND
EVANS, Chief Justice.A jury convicted appellant of aggravated robbery and assessed punishment at 50 years confinement. In her appeal, appellant asserted that the parole charge given to the jury pursuant to Tex.Code Crim.P. Ann. art. 37.07, sec. 4,1 violated the separation of powers doctrine. Upholding the constitutionality of the statute, this Court overruled the points of error. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals vacated the judgment of this Court .and remanded the cause so the point concerning the parole charge may be reconsidered in light of its holding in Rose v. State, 752 S.W.2d 529 (Tex.Crim.App.1987).
In Rose, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals held that article 37.07, section 4 violated the separation of powers and the due course of law provisions of the Texas Constitution. Rose, 752 S.W.2d at 552. On its own motion for rehearing, the court then held that when the trial court gives a parole charge, the appellate court must apply the rule 81(b)(2) test to determine whether appellant was harmed. Id. at 554; Tex.R.App.P. 81(b)(2). That rule provides:
[i]f the appellate record in a criminal case reveals error in the proceedings below, *498the appellate court shall reverse the judgment under review, unless the appellate court determines beyond a reasonable doubt that the error made no contribution to the conviction or to the punishment.
In making its assessment of harm in Rose, the court pointed to a number of different factors in finding the error made no contribution to the punishment assessed: an explanatory charge given to the jury about the parole law; the egregious facts of the case; and the defendant’s criminal record. Rose, 752 S.W.2d at 554-55. The jury convicted Rose of aggravated robbery and assessed the maximum sentence of life imprisonment.
Here, the jury was presented with overwhelming evidence of a heinous, premeditated crime. The victim of this crime, Mr. Lourie Ford, was 80 years old, and weighed a scant 103 pounds. He lived alone in his small house, next to a church, in the Acres Home addition of Houston. About a week before the robbery, appellant told several acquaintances of her plan to rob Mr. Ford. She said she planned to knock on his door and ask to use his telephone. “Once she got inside,” she intended to look around “to see if there was anything” of value. If Mr. Ford put a fight up or struggled with her, “she would kill him.” True to her plan, appellant and her co-defendant walked up to Mr. Ford’s front door about 10 p.m. on May 8, 1985. She knocked on Mr. Ford’s door and asked if she could use his telephone. When Mr. Ford replied in the affirmative, she followed him into the house. Mr. Ford pointed out the telephone to her, and then leaned over to straighten the twisted telephone cord. At that point, appellant raised the bat she had in her hand, and hit Mr. Ford in the back of the neck. Mr. Ford gasped and tried to raise up, but appellant hit him on the top of the head. As he raised his arm to protect himself, she hit him a third time. When Mr. Ford did manage to stand up, appellant swung the bat at him as “if she were hitting a baseball,” striking him in the throat and crushing his larynx. Appellant then ransacked Mr. Ford’s house, taking his gun and other personal items, some of which she and her co-defendant later sold.
A Harris County Medical Examiner, who had performed the autopsy on Mr. Ford, testified that Mr. Ford’s death resulted “from a crushed larynx and acute subdural hemorrhage and cerebral contusions due to blunt trauma.” The medical examiner found “multiple lacerations, multiple contusions, multiple stab wounds.” He found a laceration on the back of Mr. Ford’s head, toward the top of his head, and along the left ear extending to the region of the skull. The cartilage of Mr. Ford’s ear was fragmented into multiple parts. There were stab wounds along the left side of his neck, in front of his left ear, and by his lip. There were also two stab wounds on the left side of his neck, and a “through-and-through stab wound at the back of the neck.” The medical examiner also found multiple fractured ribs on both sides of the body. The jury was presented with photographs showing the nature and extent of Mr. Ford’s injuries.
At the punishment phase of the trial, the trial court charged the jury that the range of punishment for aggravated robbery was confinement for not less than five nor more than 99 years, or life, in addition to a $10,000 fine. The court charged the jury regarding the parole law and good conduct time, but then instructed:
You may consider the existence of the parole law and good conduct time. However, you are not to consider the extent to which good conduct time may be awarded to or forfeited by this particular defendant. You are not to consider the manner in which the parole law may be applied to this particular defendant.
Appellant’s trial counsel objected to this portion of the charge, arguing that it deprived his client of her right to have the jury make “a true assessment” of the years she would have to serve.
During the punishment phase of trial, the State called four witnesses who testified that appellant’s reputation for being a law abiding citizen was bad. Several of appellant’s family testified that they would help her meet any conditions of probation.
*499Appellant’s trial counsel then called the State prosecutor and asked him, among other questions, the following:
Would you explain to the jury the difference between the finding of a deadly weapon as it affects the practicality of the sentence itself?
The prosecutor responded:
Yes, sir. According to new law that allows jurors to hear evidence of what the parole law is all about, there are instructions drawn up by the Court which explain that. If someone is convicted of a serious crime such as aggravated robbery, kidnapping, sexual assault, or any number of different crimes and if there is an affirmative finding that a deadly weapon was used, in order for that person to become eligible for parole, they have to do an automatic one-third of their sentence or twenty years, whatever is less.
In his opening argument, the prosecutor argued that appellant’s crime was a “coldblooded assassination,” and not a proper case for probation. Referring to his own testimony, when called by the defense as a witness, he noted that appellant, if sentenced to the penitentiary, would not be eligible for parole until one-third of the sentence had passed. He stated that it would not matter if appellant was sentenced to the penitentiary for life or 99 years, she would become eligible for parole after 20 years. He further stated that under the court’s charge, the jury could consider the existence of the parole law, but that it should not consider the law as applied to appellant. He specifically asked the jury, if it did not assess a punishment of life imprisonment, to assess not less than 45 years “because of the facts of the case.”
Appellant’s trial counsel argued that the jury should consider what it would be like to be sent to prison “for a life sentence, 10 or 30 years.” He argued that because of the deadly weapon finding, appellant would he required to serve one-third of any time assessed, “flat,” meaning full calendar years. He asserted: “you may rest assured there is no way around that period of time, so the time you assess will be served day by day by day, with no hope until that time has evaporated.”
In his closing argument, the prosecutor reiterated the facts of Mr. Ford’s death. He noted that,
Mr. Ford was a living and breathing human being. Can you envision what it would take to do something like that? She hits him so hard that she breaks his skull to the point where the medical examiner can peel it off and see his skull. She doesn’t stop there, she swings its again and she hits him again. She hits him on the top of his head, then she hits him a third time as he raises his hand. How hard did she have to hit him? Can you imagine how hard? Can you imagine what it sounded like when it hit the skull of Mr. Ford. Think of the horror most of us would feel. Think about standing over someone and breaking someone’s skull, his ribs, his back. And then to get a knife and stick him with it, not once, but more than once in the neck. What kind of person does that?
The prosecutor then noted that appellant’s trial counsel was asking for a low term of years. He noted the range of punishment, and asserted that it did not matter if the jury assessed 99 years or 65 years, “anything over sixty is just there. If you want her to spend twenty years in the penitentiary before she is eligible for parole, you’ve got to give her life or sixty years. That’s not my doing, that’s the Parole Board. That’s what life really means.” Finally, the prosecutor pleaded for the jury to do justice in the case “and give her life because that’s what the evidence calls for.”
The jury chose not to assess appellant’s punishment at life imprisonment, and instead assessed punishment at 50 years confinement.
The trial court’s charge to the jury, which tracks the language of article 37.07, specifically instructs the jury that it is not to consider the manner in which the parole law may be applied to appellant. Although the court did not give an additional explanatory instruction, the court’s limiting in*500struction clearly told the jury it could not consider the parole law information in its assessment of appellant’s punishment. The limiting instruction was the court’s “last word” on the subject of parole, and contrary to appellant’s contention, the limiting charge did not conflict with the court’s earlier instruction giving general information about the parole law. We therefore presume, in the absence of any rebutting evidence, that the jury followed the court’s instructions in the manner presented. Rose, 752 S.W.2d at 554; Cobarrubio v. State, 675 S.W.2d 749, 752 (Tex.Crim.App.1983); see also Howell v. State, 757 S.W.2d 513, 517 (Tex.App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1988, pet. pending).
In assessing appellant’s punishment, the jury was entitled to consider the brutal nature of appellant’s assault on an elderly and defenseless victim, appellant’s premeditated plan to commit a felonious assault and robbery, and appellant’s bad reputation in the community. The evidence more than justifies the jury’s assessment of 50 years imprisonment. There is no evidence in the record that the jury disregarded the court’s limiting instruction, and quite to the contrary, if the jury had disregarded the instruction, it likely would have assessed appellant’s punishment at 60 years or life imprisonment, as requested by the prosecutor. We conclude that evidence in the record does not rebut the presumption that the jury followed the court’s cautionary instruction, and we hold beyond a reasonable doubt that the court’s general advice about the parole law made no contribution to the punishment assessed. Tex.R.App.P. 81(b)(2).
Appellant’s point of error is overruled.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
O’CONNOR, J., dissenting.
. Ch. 576, sec. 1, 1985 Tex.Gen.Laws 2195, amended by ch. 66, sec. 1, 1987 Tex.Gen.Laws 170, amended by ch. 1101, sec. 15, 1987 Tex.Gen. Laws 3765.