Examine the limited and the unlimited, especially in love.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → If you forget me, if you neglect me, if you detach yourself from me, you lose yourself in the nothingness of the world, which is not life, is not worthy of you, of what I give you existence for.
- → What do the difficulties of life in this world matter?
- → The more you think about me and love me, the sooner you are aware of the truth, the less you suffer.
- → The human experience of pain is objectively inevitable in life in the world, because in it man must born, fall ill and die.
- → In addition, pain has a significant subjective factor, the difference between what you want and what happens, a difference on which man can gradually intervene.
- → In itself, every event in the world is meaningless and worthless.
- → If you don't lead it, your mind imposes on you the contents of the world, sooner or later painful.
- → If you knew me, you wouldn't be scandalized, you'd smile at the events of the world.
- → In the fight for awakening you can see the enormous power of illusion and your changes in the face of events.
- → I love you and I am with you even in your most difficult moments.
- → The current constraints on your knowledge make it difficult for you to understand the truth, but they do not belong to you, they are the work of the world.
- → Every aspect of material illusion, including the body and its cognitive resources, tends to hide the true nature of man.
- → Discover and choose your nature, your destiny, the meaning of your existence, and nothing can deprive you of it.
- → I love you and I want you, as you already know, and I will undoubtedly have you.
- → You are mine, you belong to me, and this is not your world.
- → The solution to the world's problems does not belong to the world, it transcends it.
- → Remember that you are not your body, identify yourself spiritually.
- → Examine the limited and the unlimited, especially in love.
Relative arguments