I definitely love you.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → I want you and you want me.
- → Do not love, do not want for you and do not look for things or relationships that are vain, false, empty, apparent, not sincere.
- → If and when you want me, I am there, we are connected.
- → If you want to notice it, you have to think about it voluntarily, with love.
- → To love me, if you want to love me, you must meet me.
Recurrences in the text
- → I definitely love you.
- → If you want to notice it, you have to think about it voluntarily, with love.
- → No difficulty is comparable to eternal life.
- → Accept everything and look.
- → If and when you know who you're, you can let go, you can trust me, love me and let me act.
- → Accept difficulties with generosity, courage and love, based on eternal truth.
- → The knowledge of the contrast between my omnipotent and loving nature, and the enormous malignancy of the cosmos, shows you what I have given you from the beginning, my nature.
- → Starting to recognize one's own unawareness is a step towards awakening, but it can be painful.
- → In the world it is difficult to understand and remember that I exist, I am eternal and I love you, that you have divine nature and the world is not real.
- → Say that pain and difficulties are temporary, they belong to this world and not to you, who are destined to exist forever, with me, in love.
- → The wish for me is fulfilled in a safe, balanced way, does not cause guilt, does not accuse.
- → Desiring or practicing forgiveness or balance in difficulties overcomes the conditioning of the world.
- → Explore this path in depth, and don't blame yourself for the difficulties.
- → Love is a voluntary choice and a way of knowing.
- → The unconscious experience of the world deludes and weighs down your nature.
- → The world seeks to obscure the higher reality of full truth and draws you towards its ever decomposable and temporary emptiness.
- → The world is by nature a labyrinth, it does not contain its own solution.
Relative arguments