If you want it, you know that I love you.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → The truth is eternal, unlimited, your essence, your root, your nature and your destiny.
- → If you turn away from the truth you lose yourself, you forget who you are and you suffer.
- → The strength of the world proclaims temporariness, tends to distance you from the truth, to chain you to its conditioning, to make you suffer.
- → The illusion of the world generates a great but temporary pain, it has no power over the eternal truth, over your essence.
- → If you want you can oppose the world and return to the truth, and in this act you find yourself and a deep understanding for others.
Recurrences in the text
- → Even the last man is always mine.
- → If you want it, you know that I love you.
- → At every moment many signs of an inconsistent reality present themselves to the consciousness, while the eternal reality remains invisible to the senses.
- → Physical nature makes choice difficult, pulls towards matter, to which it belongs.
- → This force was already in you, but it emerges if you want it until you see the illusion of the world.
- → In the fight for awakening you can see the enormous power of illusion and your changes in the face of events.
- → If you want it, the unlimited good is yours.
- → Trust as I do.
- → The awakening of man in the world requires will, love, balance, an intelligent and confident energy.
- → The world strongly projects its materialistic illusion, but it is destined to show its inconsistency.
- → Choose me consciously and discover that you can find me whenever you want, to your immense advantage.
- → If you want you can oppose the world and return to the truth, and in this act you find yourself and a deep understanding for others.
- → The worst trap in your path is considering yourself different and colliding with others to boost your ego.
- → Valid knowledge seeks truth and certainty, and is the first tool for adequate and effective choices and actions.
Relative arguments