I want you to love me, I always love you, in silence, joy and pain, I invite you to true, complete love that comes from within and shakes you hard, deep, intense.
Above all love A hidden inheritance
of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica Argument
→ You are my beloved , wanted , desired children , in whom I rejoice , so rejoice in being children .→ I want you to love me, I always love you, in silence , joy and pain , I invite you to true , complete love that comes from within and shakes you hard , deep , intense .→ I, God , love you and I wish you all love me.→ You're all mine , and I'm all yours .
→ I desire love from you, your love , a great love , resistant to any force of useless vanity , that you seek me, that you discover the substance of love , my essence which is love , that you announce that you are all mine beloved children .→ My goal as a father is to let you meet my love , to let you know my love for you, my children , this continuous desire to love you, a relationship , a strong bond , which already exists , but which is always continuous , insistent , to absorb every part of you, your whole being .→ Whenever your thoughts torment you, pester you, think about me, father , that it is not worth that those thoughts overcome , confuse you, think of me even stronger and with a gentle force .
→ If your actions push you towards confusion , towards incoherent attitudes , act more strongly in me, with love , recognize me, always recognize that every thought of yours , every sick act of yours is illusory , vain , improbable .→ Now sons , you are precious and reside in my love and in my thoughts , embrace strongly the sweetness of the father , do not abandon yourselves to iniquity , but abandon yourselves to the father , who embraces , sustains and especially loves you.→ Now the son must show himself strong in love , in light and in harmony , because he is the son of a strong father , he must discover his numerous quality , he must leave what makes him suffering , unsure , confused , causes pain and illness .
Relative arguments