For a few moments don't let your mind or your attention wander on what is worth little, and turn to me with love.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → Always think of me, remember my presence, desire me, choose me strongly, talk to me and listen to me.
- → Remember me, who I am, who you are for me, love me and the world will not strike you inside, it will not make you its slave.
- → Remember the illusion of the world, of fearing nothing, of going through the difficulties like a game, remember that nothing temporary is consistent.
- → Please remember me, don't let the world take you, for your own good.
- → Confidently remember me, our relationship, who we are, our unbridgeable difference from the world, how the world works to obscure your knowledge and unbalance you.
Recurrences in the text
- → I am much closer and more intimate to you than your sensations, which are signs, of your body, a shell, of much of what you thought you were, that is, an external construction mediated with the world.
- → For a few moments don't let your mind or your attention wander on what is worth little, and turn to me with love.
- → Love with strength, with intelligence, with courage, intensely.
- → The greater your love, the more you resemble me and realize you.
- → Please remember me, don't let the world take you, for your own good.
- → The rule of love is the best, it doesn't judge and doesn't blame.
- → Ignorance, pain, selfishness and death are not for you, they are not compatible with your true nature.
- → The more you consider real to the world you are living, the less you can see my immense love and your infinite gain in reciprocating me.
- → Love is a total, full choice.
- → You and I exist to love.
- → Observe your brothers with my love, as eternal souls, at worst lost in the world, not as bodies, distinguish the eternal and the insubstantial.
- → Observe the darkness of the world and the light of love, choose between them, discover who you are like and who you belong to.
Relative arguments