I'm with you and I love you, trust you and me and our love.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
Recurrences in the text
- → I have established that you can and must experience and overcome illusion.
- → The world is by its nature painful, illusory and malicious towards you, but the evil is doomed to end and you are immortal.
- → I'm with you and I love you, trust you and me and our love.
- → The realization of man in the light comes from love, it is a loving knowledge.
- → The solution to the world's problems does not belong to the world, it transcends it.
- → The unlimited going beyond is the secret of your and my being, the boundless divinity.
- → The wish for me is fulfilled in a safe, balanced way, does not cause guilt, does not accuse.
- → Observe the world, until you understand its painful, conditioned, subject to destruction, uncertain and ambiguous nature.
- → The man taken by the world needs to detach himself from it to begin to see the truth.
- → The cosmic illusion continually attacks you through all that of it to which you attach yourself, beginning with the body, yet this illusion, however great it may be, can do nothing to you.
- → The repeated experience of temporary and unintended loss of balance can be understood in several ways.
- → If you can't be as aware as you want, that doesn't mean our bond is flimsy or fragile.
- → You do not belong to this world, you belong to eternity, you are mine and immortal.
- → Reflection, intelligence can and must see, recognize and overcome the nature of the cosmos, changing, continuously discontinuous, certainly uncertain, contradictory, tending to annihilate itself, and find in a sure and indissoluble way the immortal nature and its own unity with it.
- → When he recognizes the emptiness of the world, the child knows that he does not belong to the world, because he seeks and possesses the truth that the world does not have.
Relative arguments