The document expresses feelings of betrayal by a romantic partner. It questions why the person came into the narrator's life, igniting passions and dreams, only to ultimately discard and betray the narrator in cruel ways, such as cheating, abandonment, and inflicting physical and emotional pain. The narrator feels they were used and cast aside by the person who at one time seemed to deeply care for them.
This document is a lengthy poem describing the naked female form and how it can transform men into sinners through its nakedness alone. It uses vivid language and metaphorical descriptions to cover the nakedness with various natural elements, from clouds and twigs to streams of oil, spider webs, and mud from a graveyard. The poem pleads to cover any exposed flesh to avoid igniting sinful desires in men who view it.
The document discusses the pain of unmet expectations. It uses a series of examples to illustrate how expectations can lead to hurt when reality does not match what was hoped for. Each example describes the expectation, such as expecting kindness from others or natural phenomena, and how the reality resulted in pain instead, such as facing abuse, drought, or betrayal. The overarching message is that unrealistic or unlimited expectations set one up for disappointment and hurt.
The document is a series of stanzas where the speaker expresses that they will not mind various rejections or exclusions from the person being addressed, but requests to at least be allowed small experiences related to that person, such as sitting outside listening to their party, watching them ride by, collecting leftover food, saying their name, feeling their shadow, sketching their contours, feeling the winds that kissed them, and listening to their heartbeat. The speaker expresses a deep longing for any connection to or memory of the person, no matter how small.
The document describes how one can find heaven through love. It states that no matter what moment one is experiencing, even the most terrible, one should start and end that moment with love. It describes love as coming in many forms like tributaries, cosmos, fantasies, civilizations, and more. It says if one wants to be in heaven after death or triumph in life, there is no other route than to start and end every moment with love in one's heart.
The document expresses the speaker's immense love for someone and their regret that, as a mere mortal, they are unable to shower the object of their affection with unlimited wealth, gifts, and luxuries. The speaker lists many extravagant things they wish they could provide but cannot, from decorating the person's body with silk to building them palaces made of precious metals. However, the speaker takes comfort in the fact that no other being could love this person more deeply than they do, as their love is spiritual and can only be surpassed by the divine.
The document consists of 22 sentences that follow the same structure. Each sentence states that nobody has ever stopped the reader from doing something positive or beneficial, such as enjoying sunlight or freedom, just because something negative already exists, such as murderous nights or slavery. Overall, the document suggests that a person should not feel limited by the negative aspects of life and should pursue positive experiences.
The document warns against interfering with powerful natural and supernatural forces such as lies, scorpions, the sun, sharks, avalanches, obsession, ghosts, storms, knives, lions, corruption, vampires, gallows, bats, mirages, lightning, symbiosis, blood, and love. It describes each force in vivid and violent terms, stating that interfering with any of them would result in a gruesome and horrific death.
The document expresses feelings of betrayal by a romantic partner. It questions why the person came into the narrator's life, igniting passions and dreams, only to ultimately discard and betray the narrator in cruel ways, such as cheating, abandonment, and inflicting physical and emotional pain. The narrator feels they were used and cast aside by the person who at one time seemed to deeply care for them.
This document is a lengthy poem describing the naked female form and how it can transform men into sinners through its nakedness alone. It uses vivid language and metaphorical descriptions to cover the nakedness with various natural elements, from clouds and twigs to streams of oil, spider webs, and mud from a graveyard. The poem pleads to cover any exposed flesh to avoid igniting sinful desires in men who view it.
The document discusses the pain of unmet expectations. It uses a series of examples to illustrate how expectations can lead to hurt when reality does not match what was hoped for. Each example describes the expectation, such as expecting kindness from others or natural phenomena, and how the reality resulted in pain instead, such as facing abuse, drought, or betrayal. The overarching message is that unrealistic or unlimited expectations set one up for disappointment and hurt.
The document is a series of stanzas where the speaker expresses that they will not mind various rejections or exclusions from the person being addressed, but requests to at least be allowed small experiences related to that person, such as sitting outside listening to their party, watching them ride by, collecting leftover food, saying their name, feeling their shadow, sketching their contours, feeling the winds that kissed them, and listening to their heartbeat. The speaker expresses a deep longing for any connection to or memory of the person, no matter how small.
The document describes how one can find heaven through love. It states that no matter what moment one is experiencing, even the most terrible, one should start and end that moment with love. It describes love as coming in many forms like tributaries, cosmos, fantasies, civilizations, and more. It says if one wants to be in heaven after death or triumph in life, there is no other route than to start and end every moment with love in one's heart.
The document expresses the speaker's immense love for someone and their regret that, as a mere mortal, they are unable to shower the object of their affection with unlimited wealth, gifts, and luxuries. The speaker lists many extravagant things they wish they could provide but cannot, from decorating the person's body with silk to building them palaces made of precious metals. However, the speaker takes comfort in the fact that no other being could love this person more deeply than they do, as their love is spiritual and can only be surpassed by the divine.
The document consists of 22 sentences that follow the same structure. Each sentence states that nobody has ever stopped the reader from doing something positive or beneficial, such as enjoying sunlight or freedom, just because something negative already exists, such as murderous nights or slavery. Overall, the document suggests that a person should not feel limited by the negative aspects of life and should pursue positive experiences.
The document warns against interfering with powerful natural and supernatural forces such as lies, scorpions, the sun, sharks, avalanches, obsession, ghosts, storms, knives, lions, corruption, vampires, gallows, bats, mirages, lightning, symbiosis, blood, and love. It describes each force in vivid and violent terms, stating that interfering with any of them would result in a gruesome and horrific death.
This document expresses extreme devotion from the speaker to their beloved. Over multiple sentences, the speaker acknowledges all the bad and hurt their beloved could do to them, from neglect to physical and emotional abuse. However, the speaker states that their beloved's mere presence inspires and blesses them, transforming their grief into happiness. The speaker humbly requests that their beloved never leave them, even if they choose to torture or crucify the speaker, as a life without their beloved would be more punishing than death.
This document discusses doing things wholeheartedly, whether big or small tasks. It provides examples of various types of actions one could take, from basic daily tasks to grand humanitarian acts. The overall message is that if one commits fully with their entire being to whatever they do, no matter the scale, they will find success and face no impediments along the way.
The document provides a series of statements contrasting harmful uses of various tools, weapons, and concepts with alternative beneficial uses. Each statement follows the pattern of saying to wholeheartedly use something but not for a harmful purpose, and to instead ensure using it for a positive purpose that defeats evil or corruption. Some examples given are using a knife to drive away devils instead of killing, using thorns to carve designs instead of puncturing skin, and using death to relieve those suffering from disease instead of strangulating mankind.
This document is a letter from Baphomet to Ana Wright discussing death. It states that as immortal stars, there is no true death, only a transition from one state to another. It describes death as shedding one's physical body and embracing eternal ecstasy in union with Nuit. It asserts that for those who know themselves as immortal and dwell in eternity, death has no power and is merely a passing shadow. The letter aims to bring comfort to those facing death by reframing it not as an end but as a continuation of existence in unity with the divine.
The document discusses how leaving various living and non-living things in their natural habitats would make a big difference compared to confining them. It describes animals, plants, natural phenomena and concepts being left to exist freely in the wild rather than being restricted or contained. In the concluding paragraph, it states that leaving the "beats of Immortal Love" to exist in all people regardless of attributes would make no difference at all as long as God's blessings exist in the universe.
The document discusses controlling one's anger and the consequences of failing to do so. It states that if one does not control their anger, they should prepare to experience numerous negative outcomes including losing sense and control, suffering defeat, and harming important relationships. Overall, the message is that anger must be controlled or it will lead to self-imprisonment and ruin.
The document is a plea to trust the speaker, where they promise to sacrifice everything for the other person's happiness and well-being. The speaker promises to alleviate any sadness, help overcome challenges, enrich their life with happiness and light, fulfill all their desires, protect them from harm, and transform their life into one of beauty, wealth and love. They say they will do this even after death to ensure the other person finds ultimate love and fulfillment.
The document is a first person account that describes how the speaker was never first at various accomplishments, skills, and activities. It lists over 30 things the speaker was not first at, including art, music, business, sports, dancing, magic, mountain climbing, public speaking, debates, memorization, and breathing. However, it concludes by saying that the one thing the speaker was first at was capturing the heart of the person reading the document and having their signature on every drop of the speaker's blood.
It was very easy to take certain actions like opening gates, lighting a cigarette, or saying "I love you", but it was exceedingly difficult to undo the consequences of those actions. Stopping water flow, extinguishing flames, or sustaining a relationship all proved to be challenging tasks. While taking a life was easy by pulling a trigger, reviving the dead was wholly impossible as one cannot interfere with the powers of the Creator.
The poem is a meditation on the universal and inevitable nature of death. It describes how all living things, from the smallest creatures to kings and patriarchs, will eventually pass away and return to the earth. It encourages the reader to face their own mortality with calmness and trust, rather than fear, by contemplating our shared fate and the eternal, natural cycles of life.
The document warns to beware of many things that are not as they seem and can blindside, poison, devastate, or betray one in devastating ways. It cautions to beware of light that blinds, sweetness that poisons, silence that devastates, silk that strangles, sand that sinks, ice that chokes, truth that burns, night that dissolves, seductresses that behead, stars that stone, dreams that incarcerate, smiles that tear, power that weakens, diamonds that impoverish, brilliance that devastates, clarity that obfuscates, souls that hollow, breath that kills, and hearts that betray.
The document contrasts various positive and negative concepts. It describes positive concepts as being far away from negative ones, with the negative ones including despair, lies, boredom, war, and death. The positive concepts that are contrasted include nature elements like lotuses, rainbows, waterfalls, and the sun, as well as more abstract things like truth, unity, sleep, the mind, breath, love, and the author himself. The overall message is about finding positivity despite difficulties.
The document is a series of rhetorical questions that suggest it is better to help others in need through acts of kindness, charity and compassion rather than be selfish. Some key points:
- Leftover food should be given to stray dogs rather than thrown away. Extra wealth and resources should help the impoverished rather than be hoarded.
- One's talents, knowledge, and abilities could enlighten and help others rather than be wasted or used to harm.
- Acts of compassion like donating blood, helping the illiterate, comforting the grieving are preferable to indifference or cruelty.
- Appreciating the beauty of the world and using one's strengths to lift others up are better than destructive
The document announces a performance of sonnets and monologues by William Shakespeare presented by the Teatro & Contorni group from Genoa, Italy. It will feature 12 students who have studied under the direction of Patrizia Ercole. The performance will include excerpts from Shakespeare's plays Henry V, As You Like It, Hamlet, Richard II, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Romeo and Juliet, and Much Ado About Nothing. It will also feature performances of Sonnets 23, 75, 90, 109, 116, 129, 147, 12, 8, 113, and 116. The program concludes with fragments from The Taming of the Shrew.
The document discusses how various positive concepts like beauty, creativity, and humanity arose from "Nothingness". It asserts that Nothingness gave rise to ultimate expressions of these concepts. It strongly condemns proclaiming that Nothingness is meaningless or the sole cause of death in the world. The document contains similar assertions about Nothingness giving rise to other concepts in three sections, each time strongly objecting to dismissing or blaming Nothingness.
This document discusses how, despite people's best intentions and resolutions, human nature often takes over. It provides numerous examples of how people resolve to do things like stay awake all night or not eat all day, yet inevitably give in to sleepiness, hunger, and other basic human needs and instincts. The document argues that all these things are possible because we are only human, and certain behaviors are natural and hard-wired into our nature.
This document argues that having compassion for and interacting with people living with HIV/AIDS will not put one's health at risk or lead to negative consequences. It uses a series of phrases beginning with "wont in anyway" to assert that various compassionate actions like shaking hands, kissing, or sharing food will not infect, harm, or kill the person engaging in those actions. However, it claims that not showing such compassion and neglecting those living with HIV/AIDS would be the cause of their "ghastliest of death." The overall message is one of promoting compassion over fear or stigma regarding HIV/AIDS.
The document is a poetic reflection on the meaning and essence of life. It states that life was not just about any single thing like singing, dancing, exploring, or helping others, but that it was a combination of all of these things and more. Life was the most powerful blessing given by God. Life was more beautifully gorgeous than what could be perceived, even in the wildest of dreams.
This document contrasts negative experiences like failure, loss, abuse, and isolation with the experience of being in love. It states that while one may experience these negatives once, it is not necessary to always experience them. However, once experiencing love, it means being in love forever and ever, with love's goodness caring for one's soul eternally. Love is described as the most precious thing alive that can exist forever through countless future births.
Without The Slightest Of Hindrance Setting In.Nikhil Parekh
The document describes how the narrator is unable to appreciate or enjoy various experiences in life before negative forces set in to disrupt them. These include the setting of evening, crashing waves destroying the shore, the onset of sleep, dark clouds blocking the sun, tornadoes blowing out candles, pragmatic riddles replacing mystery, the cry of accidental death interrupting childbirth, feces spoiling food, afternoon heat melting ice, divorce shattering dreams of parenthood, laziness replacing hard work, war ending humanity, manipulation destroying artistry, boredom overtaking smiles, politics ruining honesty, human error defeating perfection, the devil crushing virility, and death ending breath. However, the narrator's love remains immortalized in their heart
The document expresses that no natural or supernatural entity can nourish, protect, or inspire the speaker as much as their immortal mother. Over multiple sentences, it lists things like mountains, oceans, sunlight, etc. that could never care for the speaker as much as their mother. It describes how the mother protected them before birth, endlessly blesses them, admires them more than anything else, and breathes their reflection with every breath - cementing that no one can care for the speaker as much as their immortal mother.
The document describes an individual who is immortally overpowering in every aspect of their being, including their lips, hair, belly, cheeks, voice, neck, graciousness, faith, fragrance, grace, earlobes, dance, shadow, humanity, feet, destiny lines, shoulders, conscience, breath, and love. Each feature is said to be immortally overpowering over some part of the speaker that is described as flawed, inadequate, or diminishing in comparison.
This document expresses extreme devotion from the speaker to their beloved. Over multiple sentences, the speaker acknowledges all the bad and hurt their beloved could do to them, from neglect to physical and emotional abuse. However, the speaker states that their beloved's mere presence inspires and blesses them, transforming their grief into happiness. The speaker humbly requests that their beloved never leave them, even if they choose to torture or crucify the speaker, as a life without their beloved would be more punishing than death.
This document discusses doing things wholeheartedly, whether big or small tasks. It provides examples of various types of actions one could take, from basic daily tasks to grand humanitarian acts. The overall message is that if one commits fully with their entire being to whatever they do, no matter the scale, they will find success and face no impediments along the way.
The document provides a series of statements contrasting harmful uses of various tools, weapons, and concepts with alternative beneficial uses. Each statement follows the pattern of saying to wholeheartedly use something but not for a harmful purpose, and to instead ensure using it for a positive purpose that defeats evil or corruption. Some examples given are using a knife to drive away devils instead of killing, using thorns to carve designs instead of puncturing skin, and using death to relieve those suffering from disease instead of strangulating mankind.
This document is a letter from Baphomet to Ana Wright discussing death. It states that as immortal stars, there is no true death, only a transition from one state to another. It describes death as shedding one's physical body and embracing eternal ecstasy in union with Nuit. It asserts that for those who know themselves as immortal and dwell in eternity, death has no power and is merely a passing shadow. The letter aims to bring comfort to those facing death by reframing it not as an end but as a continuation of existence in unity with the divine.
The document discusses how leaving various living and non-living things in their natural habitats would make a big difference compared to confining them. It describes animals, plants, natural phenomena and concepts being left to exist freely in the wild rather than being restricted or contained. In the concluding paragraph, it states that leaving the "beats of Immortal Love" to exist in all people regardless of attributes would make no difference at all as long as God's blessings exist in the universe.
The document discusses controlling one's anger and the consequences of failing to do so. It states that if one does not control their anger, they should prepare to experience numerous negative outcomes including losing sense and control, suffering defeat, and harming important relationships. Overall, the message is that anger must be controlled or it will lead to self-imprisonment and ruin.
The document is a plea to trust the speaker, where they promise to sacrifice everything for the other person's happiness and well-being. The speaker promises to alleviate any sadness, help overcome challenges, enrich their life with happiness and light, fulfill all their desires, protect them from harm, and transform their life into one of beauty, wealth and love. They say they will do this even after death to ensure the other person finds ultimate love and fulfillment.
The document is a first person account that describes how the speaker was never first at various accomplishments, skills, and activities. It lists over 30 things the speaker was not first at, including art, music, business, sports, dancing, magic, mountain climbing, public speaking, debates, memorization, and breathing. However, it concludes by saying that the one thing the speaker was first at was capturing the heart of the person reading the document and having their signature on every drop of the speaker's blood.
It was very easy to take certain actions like opening gates, lighting a cigarette, or saying "I love you", but it was exceedingly difficult to undo the consequences of those actions. Stopping water flow, extinguishing flames, or sustaining a relationship all proved to be challenging tasks. While taking a life was easy by pulling a trigger, reviving the dead was wholly impossible as one cannot interfere with the powers of the Creator.
The poem is a meditation on the universal and inevitable nature of death. It describes how all living things, from the smallest creatures to kings and patriarchs, will eventually pass away and return to the earth. It encourages the reader to face their own mortality with calmness and trust, rather than fear, by contemplating our shared fate and the eternal, natural cycles of life.
The document warns to beware of many things that are not as they seem and can blindside, poison, devastate, or betray one in devastating ways. It cautions to beware of light that blinds, sweetness that poisons, silence that devastates, silk that strangles, sand that sinks, ice that chokes, truth that burns, night that dissolves, seductresses that behead, stars that stone, dreams that incarcerate, smiles that tear, power that weakens, diamonds that impoverish, brilliance that devastates, clarity that obfuscates, souls that hollow, breath that kills, and hearts that betray.
The document contrasts various positive and negative concepts. It describes positive concepts as being far away from negative ones, with the negative ones including despair, lies, boredom, war, and death. The positive concepts that are contrasted include nature elements like lotuses, rainbows, waterfalls, and the sun, as well as more abstract things like truth, unity, sleep, the mind, breath, love, and the author himself. The overall message is about finding positivity despite difficulties.
The document is a series of rhetorical questions that suggest it is better to help others in need through acts of kindness, charity and compassion rather than be selfish. Some key points:
- Leftover food should be given to stray dogs rather than thrown away. Extra wealth and resources should help the impoverished rather than be hoarded.
- One's talents, knowledge, and abilities could enlighten and help others rather than be wasted or used to harm.
- Acts of compassion like donating blood, helping the illiterate, comforting the grieving are preferable to indifference or cruelty.
- Appreciating the beauty of the world and using one's strengths to lift others up are better than destructive
The document announces a performance of sonnets and monologues by William Shakespeare presented by the Teatro & Contorni group from Genoa, Italy. It will feature 12 students who have studied under the direction of Patrizia Ercole. The performance will include excerpts from Shakespeare's plays Henry V, As You Like It, Hamlet, Richard II, A Midsummer Night's Dream, Romeo and Juliet, and Much Ado About Nothing. It will also feature performances of Sonnets 23, 75, 90, 109, 116, 129, 147, 12, 8, 113, and 116. The program concludes with fragments from The Taming of the Shrew.
The document discusses how various positive concepts like beauty, creativity, and humanity arose from "Nothingness". It asserts that Nothingness gave rise to ultimate expressions of these concepts. It strongly condemns proclaiming that Nothingness is meaningless or the sole cause of death in the world. The document contains similar assertions about Nothingness giving rise to other concepts in three sections, each time strongly objecting to dismissing or blaming Nothingness.
This document discusses how, despite people's best intentions and resolutions, human nature often takes over. It provides numerous examples of how people resolve to do things like stay awake all night or not eat all day, yet inevitably give in to sleepiness, hunger, and other basic human needs and instincts. The document argues that all these things are possible because we are only human, and certain behaviors are natural and hard-wired into our nature.
This document argues that having compassion for and interacting with people living with HIV/AIDS will not put one's health at risk or lead to negative consequences. It uses a series of phrases beginning with "wont in anyway" to assert that various compassionate actions like shaking hands, kissing, or sharing food will not infect, harm, or kill the person engaging in those actions. However, it claims that not showing such compassion and neglecting those living with HIV/AIDS would be the cause of their "ghastliest of death." The overall message is one of promoting compassion over fear or stigma regarding HIV/AIDS.
The document is a poetic reflection on the meaning and essence of life. It states that life was not just about any single thing like singing, dancing, exploring, or helping others, but that it was a combination of all of these things and more. Life was the most powerful blessing given by God. Life was more beautifully gorgeous than what could be perceived, even in the wildest of dreams.
This document contrasts negative experiences like failure, loss, abuse, and isolation with the experience of being in love. It states that while one may experience these negatives once, it is not necessary to always experience them. However, once experiencing love, it means being in love forever and ever, with love's goodness caring for one's soul eternally. Love is described as the most precious thing alive that can exist forever through countless future births.
Without The Slightest Of Hindrance Setting In.Nikhil Parekh
The document describes how the narrator is unable to appreciate or enjoy various experiences in life before negative forces set in to disrupt them. These include the setting of evening, crashing waves destroying the shore, the onset of sleep, dark clouds blocking the sun, tornadoes blowing out candles, pragmatic riddles replacing mystery, the cry of accidental death interrupting childbirth, feces spoiling food, afternoon heat melting ice, divorce shattering dreams of parenthood, laziness replacing hard work, war ending humanity, manipulation destroying artistry, boredom overtaking smiles, politics ruining honesty, human error defeating perfection, the devil crushing virility, and death ending breath. However, the narrator's love remains immortalized in their heart
The document expresses that no natural or supernatural entity can nourish, protect, or inspire the speaker as much as their immortal mother. Over multiple sentences, it lists things like mountains, oceans, sunlight, etc. that could never care for the speaker as much as their mother. It describes how the mother protected them before birth, endlessly blesses them, admires them more than anything else, and breathes their reflection with every breath - cementing that no one can care for the speaker as much as their immortal mother.
The document describes an individual who is immortally overpowering in every aspect of their being, including their lips, hair, belly, cheeks, voice, neck, graciousness, faith, fragrance, grace, earlobes, dance, shadow, humanity, feet, destiny lines, shoulders, conscience, breath, and love. Each feature is said to be immortally overpowering over some part of the speaker that is described as flawed, inadequate, or diminishing in comparison.
The document is a descriptive poem about the importance and symbolism of a man's tie. It describes the tie dangling from his collar, fluttering in the breeze, and rising and falling with his breaths. The tie keeps him warm, gives him structure and posture, hides buttons, and allows him to dance and mingle with the rich. Most importantly, the tie makes the man feel complete and sophisticated as it has been with him for decades.
This document describes various natural phenomena and human experiences as fractions that are accentuated or highlighted in some way. It discusses fractions of hills, waves, grass, clouds, philosophers, roses, politician speeches, icebergs, paintings, shark tails, eagles, peacocks, nightingale songs, frog leaps, business tycoon parties, tortoise strides, soldier marches, and human breath. However, it ultimately describes love as immortal, uninhibited, omniscient, eternally gratifying, and lasting through endless lifetimes in a symbiotic journey of oneness.
There were many things that different people hated for various reasons. Some hated work, war, heat, noise, buildings that blocked views, dark places, rain, bad smells, obstacles, constantly being busy, cold, wild places, graveyards, unpredictability, noise children, uncomfortable truths, darkness, and conventions. However, if anyone were to hate hate itself, it would be God, as humans have a tendency to take even small dislikes to extreme levels while God is able to transform all hatred into love.
The document poses a series of rhetorical questions encouraging the reader to want success, freedom, happiness, compassion, and to live life to the fullest. It says if the answer is no, to go to hell, but if the answer is yes, "immortal love" will take you to fulfill all your desires and ensure you are blessed and smile/live a sacred life. The overall message is to pursue your dreams and passions in life.
The document describes the speaker's deep love and bond with a woman through descriptions of her body parts. Each part, though seemingly small or insignificant to others, provides great joy, rejuvenation, exhilaration and love to the speaker when she caresses, kisses, or breathes, etc. No other person or force in the entire universe could make the speaker feel the transcendent emotions that she makes him feel with even the smallest of actions.
The document expresses a desire to use the human body and faculties only to help others and make the world a better place. It asks for hands to help the suffering, legs to explore and help those in need, eyes to see beauty and help the afflicted, and a voice to sing and lift others. It asks for a brain to solve problems, smiles and fingers to spread hope, and a sense of smell, memory, and destiny to connect with and empower others. The overall message is a plea to use one's entire being to transform the world into a land of benevolence and immortal humanity.
The soldiers endured extreme hardship and danger as they fought to defend their country from intruders. They survived on meager rations in freezing conditions, constantly scanning for movement while taking defensive positions. When attacked, they responded aggressively with gunfire, grenades, and tanks to push back the infiltrators. Though they thought of loved ones back home, the soldiers put the safety of their nation above all else as they relentlessly fought to ensure the majority of their population could live in peace.
This document expresses a desire to spread positive qualities like happiness, strength, truth, and love among those suffering greatly from issues like torture, misery, corruption, prejudice, deprivation, betrayal, and neglect. It advocates spreading these qualities among people experiencing a wide range of physical, emotional and social hardships.
The document discusses the challenges and difficulties of daring to dream. It states that if you dare to dream of ambitious goals, you must be prepared for both tangible and intangible setbacks and failures. Across 14 paragraphs, each beginning with "If you dare to dream of...", the document lists lofty dreams such as conquering mountains or seas, spreading truth or uniting humanity. It then warns that each dream risks disastrous falls, drowning, lies, exhaustion, defeat, betrayal and more. The overarching message is that daring to dream ambitiously also requires preparing for significant obstacles and failures along the way.
This document describes immortal soldiers who will continue marching forward for their country no matter the obstacles or dangers they face. It lists numerous hypothetical harsh conditions and threats such as tornadoes, panthers, scorpions, avalanches, earthquakes, bombs, captivity, pain, and more. However, the soldiers are committed to continuing their march until every part of their sacred motherland is freed from tyranny and invaders, and emerges victorious.
Various body parts and living things experience joy from being splashed by different sensations. Eyes love being splashed by empathy, lips by smiles, hair by breeze, spiders by silk, grass by dewdrops, ears by sounds, skin by rain, snakes by venom, nests by eggs, walls by color, children by belonging, sky by clouds, bodies by cloth, flowers by bees, artists by color, mothers by innocence, the depressed by freshness, blinded men by humanity, noses by breath, and hearts by togetherness in relationships across births.
The document discusses how many natural human instincts like eating, sleeping, and enjoying beauty are elevated to an art form when practiced with virtues like health, manifesting dreams, and spreading happiness. It argues that acts of selflessness, sacrifice, and dedicating one's life to helping others in need are the highest forms of art, including giving wealth to the deprived, ensuring global solidarity, and sacrificing for one's countrymen. The piece ultimately states that while living and surviving is natural, sacrificing one's life to spawn hope and courage for humanity is an immortal living art.
The speaker declares their undying love for a woman, saying they will love her through countless births and beyond, despite what others may say. The passage describes the speaker being called many negative things, such as lame, dumb, blind, deaf, stupid, and more. However, the speaker insists that no matter what may come, they will always love the woman as she is immortal and solely belongs to the speaker.
The string of imagination leads deep into the speaker's loosened character and unruly conscience, putting them in dread. Particles of sunlight filter through the tiny blackness of the speaker's mind, biting their elastic heart like pointed black darts aiming at sensitive organs in an inconsequential brawl. The string of imagination finally breaks with a gasping pain, leaving the speaker empty with nothing to ponder except a crimson blazing light, as dark tunnels of life emanate a hearty chuckle at those left bald and shivering without real fear.
The document expresses an eternal promise between two lovers. It states that for as long as they smile, play, eat, rest, run, punch, write, sing, dance, study, cry, scream, teach, yawn, lick, climb, dream, joke, breathe, and take birth on this earth, they will do all these things together as immortal lovers, not just in this lifetime but in many lifetimes to come.
The document describes how while various natural and cosmic forces seem to rule over different aspects of the world, it is the immortal rule of a woman's love, qualities, and presence that truly reigns over the speaker's entire being, from their soul and senses to every part of their existence. Various parts of the speaker are described as being ruled immortally by her smile, aroma, shine, fantasy, newness, fingers, voice, conscience, breath, and most of all, her passionately everlasting love.
The document contrasts beliefs in pleasant or desirable experiences and things with the less pleasant realities that may have led to or enable those beliefs. Over 28 lines, it states that if one believes in various positive experiences or aspects of life, it is because of some negative or difficult underlying reality, such as decay enabling royal pudding or disease necessitating sunlight. The contrasts highlight how beliefs are shaped by full contexts and realities, not just the desirable parts of experiences.
1) The document is a poem that discusses loving someone unconditionally despite any harm or mistreatment they cause.
2) It lists numerous hypothetical scenarios where the speaker's love is tested through brutal acts like stabbing, abuse, torture and dismemberment.
3) However, the speaker claims their love would remain unconditional and blind to all faults or actions of the other person.
The document is a long list of things that supposedly don't matter, such as not conquering victories, alleviating humanity's suffering, or living extraordinarily accomplished lives. However, it argues that what truly matters is unveiling one's passionate heart to others, not living or dying alone, contributing to God's creation, and experiencing immortal love. Living fully and connecting with humanity are presented as the most important things.
The document provides a series of conditional statements advising against certain actions without proper knowledge or skills. It states that one should not plunge into choppy seas without knowing how to swim, write without knowing how to spell, sing without knowing how to tune instruments, eat without knowing how to chew, and engage in other activities without the right prerequisites. It concludes by saying the one thing with no prerequisites is love, which embraces all unconditionally.
The document discusses how patience can help one become a great artist. It argues that while waiting for something, one inevitably learns to appreciate even the smallest things in nature, notice subtle details others may miss, and conceive great ideas in the mind. Through patience, one can treat failures with optimism, understand others better, and learn to love fully. Ultimately, the document claims that patience is the greatest artist, as it brings out people's artistic abilities to observe, feel, and express themselves and the world.
The document describes feeling extremely inadequate and defeated despite normally being powerful or productive. This includes the sun feeling dark, a giant spider feeling small, and a healing remedy feeling like poison. In each case, the entity is described as feeling weak or ineffective when it shouldn't. The overall feeling is described as worse than any of these examples and too terrible to describe, occurring when the author wasn't writing poetry despite having all the world's wealth.
The document advises against feeling sorry for others and instead embracing them as equals. It uses a series of rhetorical questions to address those who may perceive themselves as better off in terms of traits like health, wealth or abilities. It argues that feeling sorry for others viewed as less fortunate would actually harm them more than any physical ailments, and that the best approach is to accept and help others without seeing them as different.
1) The document discusses how nature and human experiences feel imprisoned but can find freedom and beauty.
2) It describes how being trapped leads to suffering but finding freedom allows for joy, passion, love and purpose.
3) The overall message is that leaving things unrestrained to be as they naturally are results in blessings rather than curses.
This document explores the power of a voice that comes from the heart. It uses a series of contrasts between weak and strong, fleeting and enduring to illustrate that a voice driven by altruism and a desire to spread goodness will resonate profoundly and connect with the divine, regardless of any other qualities. It concludes that if a voice is philanthropic, ardent for symbiotic goodness, and most importantly comes from the inner heart, then it will reach and bond with the Creator forever.
The document discusses how no matter where one hides or what protections they employ, death will inevitably catch up to everyone. It lists numerous extreme and imaginative ways one could try to hide or protect oneself, such as hiding deep under the ocean, in remote islands, behind thick walls, or even hiring every organism on Earth to guard them. However, the document emphasizes that when one's time chosen by God arrives, death will chase, strangle, and finish them, until their last breath, regardless of who they are.
The document provides 14 examples of ways to stop various things, with each example following the pattern of "To stop [thing], all you needed to do was [action]." The things that can be stopped include a speeding train, an advancing river, a scorching desert, a lion, an avalanche, a ticking watch, slapping waves, a criminal, a snake, a swerving car, traitors, parasites, technology, sleep, stench, torture, a weeping infant, death, and an overflowing heart. The proposed actions to stop them range from pulling a chain or closing gates to applying empathy, feeding an infant, and finding a companion.
The document expresses that the author may forget many wonderful things if not experienced for too long, such as the sounds of nature, feelings, victories, and humanity's goodness. However, the author states that they can never forget their mother's womb, which was like God's compassion, even after death. The womb's compassion cannot be disowned and will be remembered for infinite lives and deaths to come.
The document is a love poem addressed to a beloved. It consists of 22 stanzas where the speaker reassures the beloved not to worry. In each stanza, the speaker says that while their body part may seem otherwise, when it comes to helping or protecting the beloved, that body part suddenly transforms into something powerful. The body parts referenced include hands, lips, teeth, shoulders, feet, eyes, fingers, eyelashes, throat, eyelids, spine, shadow, nails, bones, blood, conscience, hair, breath, and heartbeats. The overall message is a declaration of the speaker's unconditional love and dedication to the protection and care of the beloved.
This document poetically describes the power and omnipresence of love. It states that love both separates and bonds individuals beyond imagination, and that while it may ignite passions, it also enlightens even the most impoverished with hope. Overall, the document suggests that love has the power to transform souls, disseminate friendship, fulfill dreams with success, provide comfort and care, empower perseverance, and unite all people and things on Earth by granting the right to love.
The document discusses how while one may experience many things infinitely throughout their life, such as pleasure, success, or failure, what truly matters is dedicating oneself to love at least once. Specifically, the document urges all people to passionately dedicate their heart to a loved one and experience the fruitfulness of immortal love for at least once in their lifetime.
The document is a series of stanzas where the speaker expresses that they will not mind various rejections or exclusions from the person being addressed, but requests to at least be allowed small experiences related to them, such as sitting outside listening to their music, watching them from a window, collecting their leftover food, chanting their name, feeling the winds that kissed them, and listening to their heartbeat. The speaker expresses a deep devotion and attachment to the person being addressed through these requested small allowances, despite saying they will accept greater rejections.
The speaker's body refuses to function normally until experiencing the beauty and essence of their love interest. Each stanza describes a different part of the speaker's body - their eyes, toes, lips, neck, fingers, stomach, brain, breath, and heart - that refuses to do what is natural or expected. Only when experiencing the love interest through their sight, feet, cheeks, spine, palms, belly, mind, countenance, and chest can the speaker's body parts fully engage with vibrant life and passion.
The document poses a series of rhetorical questions about how certain things can be expected after negative events, such as a bee buzzing happily after flowers have decayed or a soldier remaining patriotic after surrendering. It then concludes that even after death, one can expect a place in heaven from the omniscient Lord for altruistic deeds performed in life.
The document expresses the fleeting and unpredictable nature of life through a series of contrasts between positive and negative situations that could occur within a single minute. It states that one moment one could be experiencing joy and success, while the next finding oneself in despair, defeat, or danger. Ultimately, it promises that no matter what challenges are faced, the speaker's love and compassion for the beloved will remain eternal.
The document discusses how failing or not achieving something on the first try does not preclude future success or progress. Over 30 sentences, it uses flowery language to describe grand accomplishments and then notes that not achieving such feats on the first attempt does not stop one from still doing smaller good acts. The overall message is that lack of immediate or complete success should not discourage continued positive action.
Neste trabalho, apresento alguns dados sobre a poesia de Lord Byron, seleciono alguns dos seus principais poemas para mostrar a importância de seu papel para a literatura Inglesa bem como o que caracteriza sua poesia como romântica.
The document contrasts many contrasting places and circumstances one could find themselves in before sleeping, from luxurious beds to battlefields and prisons. However, it ultimately states that when sleep comes, it does not matter where you are or what situation you face, as sleep provides an escape and ensures that when one wakes, they will see the world in a rejuvenated, optimistic light.
The document describes the unhygienic and unkempt state of a person's body as seen in a mirror. Their short, sharp hair is covered in dandruff, their lips are chapped, nostrils contain hardened mucus, ears have yellow earwax, and their neck has dirt streaks. Their underarms smell unpleasant, teeth are discolored, palms are scribbled on, and ragged clothes have holes while ants eat stuck honey on their shoulder bone. Their sports shoes have a coal tar lining, and they moan in dismay and lost hope at their unwashed and unpolished appearance reflected back at them.
This poem refutes negative things others may have said about the person's beauty and qualities. Over 12 lines, the speaker asks "who told you" negative qualities such as being ugly, fat, or having swollen lips, before asserting that to them the person is beautiful in a variety of ways such as having golden honey hair, passionate breath, and skin as resplendent as a lotus. The speaker says that even if the whole world condemned the person, to them they would still be the most fascinating and lovable person, with the speaker's heart belonging to them forever.
The document expresses the author's profound pride in their love, which is compared to lasting natural phenomena rather than fleeting experiences. Over 14 stanzas, the author states that their love was not like changing shapes of the moon, violent storms, burning candles, or decaying scents but rather enduring stars, gentle winds, unrelenting fires, and fragrant lotuses. Similarly, it was not like abandoning bird mothers, violent rain, or transient commercials, but rather nurturing human mothers, rejuvenating oceans, and impactful fables. In the end, the author states their love was not a fleeting heartbeat but rather an immortal soul that gave new beginnings and perpetual grip on life.
The passage describes a kiss as having many profound and transformative effects on the speaker. The kiss is depicted through elaborate metaphors that portray it as enlightening, liberating, and filling every part of the speaker's being with warmth, beauty, happiness, and love. It allows the speaker to experience life as meaningful, empowering, and divine, even in the face of difficulties. The kiss seems to profoundly change the speaker's perspective by infusing their existence with joy, fulfillment and a sense of connection to something greater.
The document is a poetic expression of love for another person. It describes the speaker's love lingering and bonding with different parts of the person's body, from their hair down to their feet. The love witnesses their eyes and traces the lines on their hands. It feels closest to God while on their soul, and becomes the speaker's "immortal slave" when on their feet, devoted to them for current and future lifetimes.
The poem describes the speaker finding their true love and soulmate amidst the infinite possibilities in the universe. Through vivid descriptions of senses like sight, sound, touch, and smell, the poem explores all the qualities and attributes the speaker's love possesses that make them uniquely special and the only one that truly captivates the speaker, from their mesmerizing tunes and ravishing hair to their heavenly fragrance and immortal heart that bonds with the speaker's. The poem suggests their love transcends lifetimes and was destined even before birth.
The document expresses how a person's body parts and presence can communicate deep feelings and attraction without words. Each line describes how a different part of the person, such as their eyes, lips, cheeks, hair, hands, etc. expressed their attraction and enchanted the writer through subtle gestures and movements. The writing portrays the person as having an irresistible charm and passion that consumed the writer and filled them with love through every part of their being, without needing to say a word.
This document describes the power and effects of a single droplet of sweat from a godly being. In over 20 sentences, each beginning with "Just a...", it elaborates on how a single droplet was enough to profoundly impact and transform the narrator's senses, emotions, existence, and purpose when it came into contact with different parts of their body. The droplet is described as having golden color and emanating heavenly fragrance, freshness, felicity, and power. It left the narrator feeling enlightened, happy, sensuous, and driven to benevolent causes.
While nature and objects undergo changes with time and seasons, losing their vibrant colors, forms, or appearances, they still maintain their core abilities and essences. The leaves of a tree become bare in autumn but the tree remains alive. Birds molt their feathers but still have the power of flight. Though bananas become dilapidated after peeling, they are still nourishing to eat. And though the elderly appear frail while walking with canes, they retain the ability to love and dream as they are young at heart.
The document describes how various natural and man-made objects undergo changes as they age but still retain their essential qualities. Leaves lose their color in autumn but trees remain alive. Birds molt feathers but can still fly. Food loses visual appeal but retains taste and nutrition. Precious metals lose shine but keep monetary value. While the elderly appear frail, they still possess the ability to love and dream as they remain young at heart.
The document describes various methods the author uses to try and erase their name from different surfaces and objects, including soil, skin, lips, walls, trees, cakes, paper, mirrors, tables, hair, pencils, beaches, windshields, eyes, maps, records, checks, friends' hearts, and bones. However, when trying to erase their name from "hers", the author is transformed into ashes and left for the afterlife as punishment, this time without her hands in mine.
The document provides reasons for staying alive, listing natural phenomena, memories, relationships, and experiences that one would miss out on if not alive. It encourages staying alive for the sake of leaves, dreams, raindrops, memories, jokes, clothes, earth, feelings of ecstasy when alone, birds, dolphins, roses, butterflies, those who admire your accomplishments, religious idols, those who help you cross streets, cows who provide milk, winds that allow one to breathe, and one's parents who raised them. Most importantly, it says one must stay alive for the sake of the author, as their heart would stop if the other's heartbeat separated from their own.
The document discusses humanity's insignificance before God. It states that regardless of one's status or abilities, all people are equally created by God. However, it emphasizes that before God's supreme and eternal power, humanity is nothing. This nothingness is described using various analogies of transient or worthless things like matchsticks, flies, bones, and dust. The document repeats this message of human equality before God but ultimate insignificance using different examples in each paragraph.
The document is a lengthy list describing ways that someone tries to hide negative qualities or desires through superficial means, but ultimately fails. It uses vivid, dramatic language to portray the person as deeply troubled and attempting to conceal malicious, sinister, or corrupt attributes of their body, mind and soul through cosmetic means rather than addressing the underlying issues.
The document describes how the actions and qualities of the subject resemble aspects of nature, religious figures, and positive ideals. When the subject smiles, dances, dreams, or embraces, they resemble the sun, forests, clouds, waterfalls, and patriotism. In general terms, the subject is compared to divine or celestial things through their various moods and behaviors.
You Only Tell Me What To Do; O! Almighty Lord.Nikhil Parekh
The document discusses the conflicting messages one receives about worshipping parents. On one hand, they are told to worship parents unconditionally. On the other hand, they are told not to worship those who commit harmful acts like harming nature, discriminating against others, being selfish, etc. It questions how to decide whether to worship parents or not when parents themselves sometimes engage in these negative behaviors. The document provides many examples of such behaviors parents might exhibit that would conflict with unconditional worship. It ultimately asks God which rule they should follow regarding worshipping parents.
The document describes how love lived in every part of the speaker's body. Love lived in their eyes when they saw the world, ears when they listened, feet when they walked, fingers when they wrote, stomach when they ate, nails when they scratched, tongue when they spoke, nostrils when they breathed, veins when their blood pumped, throat when they drank water, lips when they smiled, bones as they grew, teeth when they chewed, mind when they thought, scalp when they touched their hair, dreams and fantasies, the lines on their palm, sweat as it dripped, scent as day turned to night, and most importantly in their heart where there was no room for anything else.
This document lists various natural phenomena and living things, stating that for each one "you don't need to teach" them how to act or behave naturally. It describes the natural behaviors of clouds, roses, desert sands, oceans, snakes, spiders, the sun, frogs, the moon, crocodiles, birds, eyelids, winds, conscience, fish, trees, avalanches, truth, children, and the heart without needing any instruction on how to do so.
The document suggests ways one could make God happy through selfless acts of compassion and service to humanity. It states that God does not need anything as his power and presence permeate all aspects of the universe. However, it says one could make God happy by embracing and nourishing those in pain, feeding the underprivileged, helping the destitute, promoting righteousness, enlightening others, supporting mankind, helping the blind, uniting the bereaved, and showering the unfortunate with love. The overall message is that serving humanity in a spirit of unconditional love and compassion could bring God happiness.
You Can't Strangulate Yourself And Still Lead LifeNikhil Parekh
The document contains a series of statements describing things that cannot be done if one wants to fully experience and lead life. Each statement provides an example of something contradictory, such as "You can't compress your fingers and still prolifically write" or "You can't stand in freezing snowflakes and still sweat like a horse." The overall message is that in order to fully live life, one cannot constrain or limit oneself in the ways described, and must face life's experiences openly without strangulating one's emotions or acting as a coward.
The Enchantment and Shadows_ Unveiling the Mysteries of Magic and Black Magic...Phoenix O
This manual will guide you through basic skills and tasks to help you get started with various aspects of Magic. Each section is designed to be easy to follow, with step-by-step instructions.
A Free eBook ~ Valuable LIFE Lessons to Learn ( 5 Sets of Presentations)...OH TEIK BIN
A free eBook comprising 5 sets of PowerPoint presentations of meaningful stories /Inspirational pieces that teach important Dhamma/Life lessons. For reflection and practice to develop the mind to grow in love, compassion and wisdom. The texts are in English and Chinese.
My other free eBooks can be obtained from the following Links:
https://www.slideshare.net/ohteikbin/presentations
https://www.slideshare.net/ohteikbin/documents
The Hope of Salvation - Jude 1:24-25 - MessageCole Hartman
Jude gives us hope at the end of a dark letter. In a dark world like today, we need the light of Christ to shine brighter and brighter. Jude shows us where to fix our focus so we can be filled with God's goodness and glory. Join us to explore this incredible passage.
A375 Example Taste the taste of the Lord, the taste of the Lord The taste of...franktsao4
It seems that current missionary work requires spending a lot of money, preparing a lot of materials, and traveling to far away places, so that it feels like missionary work. But what was the result they brought back? It's just a lot of photos of activities, fun eating, drinking and some playing games. And then we have to do the same thing next year, never ending. The church once mentioned that a certain missionary would go to the field where she used to work before the end of his life. It seemed that if she had not gone, no one would be willing to go. The reason why these missionary work is so difficult is that no one obeys God’s words, and the Bible is not the main content during missionary work, because in the eyes of those who do not obey God’s words, the Bible is just words and cannot be connected with life, so Reading out God's words is boring because it doesn't have any life experience, so it cannot be connected with human life. I will give a few examples in the hope that this situation can be changed. A375
Why is this So? ~ Do Seek to KNOW (English & Chinese).pptxOH TEIK BIN
A PowerPoint Presentation based on the Dhamma teaching of Kamma-Vipaka (Intentional Actions-Ripening Effects).
A Presentation for developing morality, concentration and wisdom and to spur us to practice the Dhamma diligently.
The texts are in English and Chinese.
The forces involved in this witchcraft spell will re-establish the loving bond between you and help to build a strong, loving relationship from which to start anew. Despite any previous hardships or problems, the spell work will re-establish the strong bonds of friendship and love upon which the marriage and relationship originated. Have faith, these stop divorce and stop separation spells are extremely powerful and will reconnect you and your partner in a strong and harmonious relationship.
My ritual will not only stop separation and divorce, but rebuild a strong bond between you and your partner that is based on truth, honesty, and unconditional love. For an even stronger effect, you may want to consider using the Eternal Love Bond spell to ensure your relationship and love will last through all tests of time. If you have not yet determined if your partner is considering separation or divorce, but are aware of rifts in the relationship, try the Love Spells to remove problems in a relationship or marriage. Keep in mind that all my love spells are 100% customized and that you'll only need 1 spell to address all problems/wishes.
Save your marriage from divorce & make your relationship stronger using anti divorce spells to make him or her fall back in love with you. End your marriage if you are no longer in love with your husband or wife. Permanently end your marriage using divorce spells that work fast. Protect your marriage from divorce using love spells to boost commitment, love & bind your hearts together for a stronger marriage that will last. Get your ex lover who has remarried using divorce spells to break up a couple & make your ex lost lover come back to you permanently.
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1. IF RAPE IS INEVITABLE; ENJOY IT.
If drowning in the fathomlessly treacherous ocean seems inevitable; why not
start to stupendously relish the unbelievably tangy spray of the sea on
every pore of your nakedly impoverished skin,
If falling from the absolute epitome of Everest seems inevitable; why not start to
passionately embrace every draught of exuberant air; as you unstoppably plummeted
like thunderbolts of lightening towards heartless ground,
If being bitten by the diabolically ominous serpent seems inevitable; why not start to
unfathomably admire its majestically unconquerable hood; as it uncontrollably
quivered under the pristinely impeccable light of the midnight moon,
If being victimized by acrimoniously slandering isolation seems inevitable;
why not start to unceasingly kiss the tranquil silence with the periphery of your
rubicund lips; even as there wasn’t a trace of civilization till countless centuries apart,
If being excoriated into nothingness whilst trapped in a lion’s cage seems inevitable;
why not start to tirelessly feast your eyes upon the unflinching patriotism; that wafted
from every ingredient of your blood that now almost overwhelmed the fabric of the
Universe,
If being slit open by a demonically gleaming knife seems inevitable; why not
start to mesmerize every cranny of the whites of your eye; with its magical
gleam even at the cruelest hour of the ribald night,
If satanically crucifying starvation seems inevitable; why not start to fondle and
massage each of your pathetically tyrannized bone; to the most ultimate epitomes of
ecstasy and satisfaction,
If cadaverously penalizing blindness seems inevitable; why not start to envisage the
entire world as a paradise of uninhibited nakedness; eternally dancing in the winds of
sensuously untamed blackness,
If horrendously subjugating deafness seems inevitable; why not start to treat your ears
only to the most opulently luxurious and vivaciously tinkling earrings,
If heinously traumatizing poverty seems inevitable; why not start to fantasize about
perpetually floating in the clouds; away from every earthly pleasure; and without a
cloth to engulf your ebullient form,
If the despairingly deteriorated gallows of jail seem inevitable; why not
start to wholesomely blindfold your effulgent eyes; and cognize a life after
2. this currently destitute lifetime of yours,
If being buried under the gorily invidious avalanche seems inevitable; why
not start to ardently play and blend with the royally untainted iceflakes; being
insurmountably tantalized by their velvety caress; just like a newly born child,
If being salaciously torn apart from your beloved seems inevitable; why not
start to fervently appreciate the inexhaustible tenacity with which your heart still
throbbed; for the destined remainder of your life,
If being lost in the inexplicably gigantic labyrinth of tunnels seems inevitable; why not
start to be enchanted and till the very last breath of your life; by the
astoundingly pitch-dark stillness,
If being pugnaciously aborted right in the womb of your mother seems inevitable;
why not start to think that this was the greatest blessing that your mother could ever
dream of bestowing upon you; even before you were born,
If walking through an endless field of acridly abstruse thorns seems inevitable; why
not start to feel perennially blessed; as the blood profusely oozing from your feet;
unassailably enriched every ounce of spell-bindingly naked soil,
If being crushed under the unstoppably speeding car seems inevitable; why
not start to feel that you’re soon going to undergo; an unchallengeable world record
for bearing maximum pain,
If the unforgivable hands of death seem inevitable; why not start to unbelievably
relish your expedition to either Heaven/Hell; feel like a quintessential ingredient of
the boundaries of the uncannily unknown,
And if treacherously besmirching rape seems inevitable; why not start to
unprecedenteldy enjoy every conceivable contact of skin with ignited skin;
why not undyingly enjoy the ultimate dewdrops of virility; now sinfully but
eventually amalgamating two bodies as one.