The world is an evanescent illusion, it seems beautiful, but if you love it, it poisons you, but not permanently.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → The world is an evanescent illusion, it seems beautiful, but if you love it, it poisons you, but not permanently.
- → The choice explores the possibilities of adhering to the truth or being prisoners of illusion.
- → The pain of the world makes no sense in the world, it has its perfect meaning beyond the temporary world, in eternal love.
- → Choose eternal life and leave the world to those who love lies.
- → The world becomes important for those who ignore eternity, but this illusion is short.
- → If you fear or crave the world, you can not observe it, you lose sight of the truth, you and me, you can not love me.
- → If you don't let it, the world can't do anything to you or possess you.
- → You can fight the whole cosmos if you want, because you belong to eternity and you are my son.
- → If you see the game of the world, you win it, otherwise you're a slave to it and you suffer.
- → Pain is the difference between what you want and what happens.
- → If you look at yourself, you can see in yourself my very nature, beyond the selfish superstructures that the world has imposed on you.
- → I know the difficulties of the world and your potential, and I am confident that you will get good results from this experience.
- → If the mind generalizes the voice of the world, it says that everything is temporary.
- → The physical and biological structure of the world itself is painful, conditioned, fragile and transitory.
- → Certain love is eternal and there I am fully.
- → The relationship with the temporary always has a certain difficulty, if you want certainty you have to look beyond the temporary and I hope you do soon.
- → When you see what the world is like for me, you'll have a good laugh.
- → The darkness of the world tries by every means and at every moment to convince you that you belong to it.
Relative arguments