Yet you let yourselves be involved in a world built on null, empty elements, in which there is nothing, absolutely nothing.
Above all love
A hidden inheritance
- of Francesco Arista and Antonella Molica
Argument
- → All the game in the world, all the power of illusion tries to influence what you believe, your way of knowing, but it can not change your nature.
- → To attach oneself to the world, to try to know and possess that which you cannot, generate pain, the oblivion of oneself, the enslavement to that which is by nature inferior.
- → The relationship with the temporary always has a certain difficulty, if you want certainty you have to look beyond the temporary and I hope you do soon.
- → If you are distracted by too many and ambiguous intermediate elements, you cultivate pain, you do not seek, you do not understand the initial, final, unique and present cause.
- → The world can not do anything to you, it can not destroy this love between you and me, it can distort and deform only the reality that belongs to it.
- → The world can not give you anything, it gives you only an empty, hypocrite, false, seductive, vain existence and life.
- → The pain of the world is nothing compared to eternal love, it is a transitory phase of the journey towards eternal love.
- → The world can make you suffer or waste time, if you let it, but on a spiritual level it can't do anything to you, it can't kill you or separate you from me.
- → Remember the illusion of the world, of fearing nothing, of going through the difficulties like a game, remember that nothing temporary is consistent.
- → Not believing in the existence of truth means not believing in anything, believing in pure nothingness, in total absurdity.
- → Think of me, he who was never born, cannot die, nothing fears, does not waver, always is, lives and loves fully.
- → If everything were temporary, nothing would make sense, knowledge would be annihilated with all consideration, value and hope.
- → Denying that truth exists is tantamount to believing that nothing exists or makes sense, up to the extreme consequence of affirming absolute nothingness.
Relative arguments