Your nature is love.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → Self-confidence is necessary for the journey, but it must be ready to detach itself from any temporary form.
- → You can win the world in terms of awareness, love, abandonment, trust and courage.
- → You are destined for an unlimited good, but first you must achieve complete trust in me.
- → To love me it is enough to believe in me, trust me, remember my love and our mutual belonging.
- → I'm leading you, trust me, don't strain yourself, be calm.
- → The awakening of man in the world requires will, love, balance, an intelligent and confident energy.
- → If you forget love, the fact that I love you and you are made to love, then the painful illusion of the world takes over you and possesses you.
- → Seeing me in others regardless of their awareness is an immense gift, a high degree of truth, a seeing what is beyond the illusions of the world.
- → A spirituality without love speaks of obedience, detachment, renunciation, can count as a failed experience or a moment of fortification, if it is prolonged it strengthens, obscures, annihilates man, is the worst illusion and allows heavy manipulations.
- → In the game of the world, illusion has enormous power and uses it with great efficiency, obscuring the immense truth, which wants to be found with intelligence, courage and love.
- → To tempt the things of the world, or to hope that they will move the way you want them to, is still unsatisfactory because of their nature.
- → Pursuing what is uncertain is only and always disappointing, a waste of time and energy.
- → My certainty and truth, I know that you fully exist and I yearn for you and I belong beyond all illusions.
- → Every suffering calls you to return aware, to remember that every event in the world is empty, evanescent, non-existent, and we are real, eternal.
- → The cosmic illusion continually attacks you through all that of it to which you attach yourself, beginning with the body, yet this illusion, however great it may be, can do nothing to you.
Relative arguments