
"Tell me the truth. What is happening to me?" Taking away his fear then and there, she replied, "Remain as you are."
He said life needn’t be a conventional humdrum, and in a quest to master his inner world he sought the recipe for truth and clarity.
She said truth and clarity are relative, and all should be afforded proportionate compassion.
He said few have the vanity and self-confidence to believe that they can inspire deification.
She said only those suffering from existential nihilism or inexorable idealism need worry of such things.
He said fascination is founded in language, and its potential to be turned and twisted.
She said the remedy is in auspicious meetings.
He said a faithless curse, cavernous greed, and the black hole of want stole his good intentions.
She said it is foolish to indulge in martyrdom.
He said he love is the most important thing in life and that all else was absurd.
She said love might wind itself through the dark forests of your being, it might pulse beneath the tender skin of your wrist, it might breed like mycelium in your blood, or haunt you like a dark night, but you are still always there, waiting, there waiting.
He said that a world will only blossom between two individuals that have the courage to go to the extreme.
She said as an ungainly, ill-mannered girl, she only sought to be a sun-warmed plum in the palm of a loved one.
He said he needed the rush of the wind, the turn of the wheel of stars, and the touch of divinity to be.
She asked, then, what of desire? Is it hidden among the constellations? Does it reside within? Is it in the moments of incomprehension? Is it something to be squandered or savoured?
He said love needs to be selfish to be authentic. It should reduce the world to two selves who become one that can never be divided.
She said love may swallow up the world, leave you bereft and alone at the centre of the universe, but it is never an excuse for building walls.
He said he lives for the hills and valleys of romantic entanglements and trust lay in the gesture of exposing yourself to harm.
She said the grace and poetry of life lay in the small moments, in the scent of wild mint, in the glint of sunlight on a swift river, in the feel of the earth beneath one’s bare arms.
And she thought nothing can be gained without yearning. Existence is like swimming in a boundless sea of waves of desire and loving is being captive of a moon rising full on the horizon. The world is like a thorny bush, you have hardly disentangled yourself from one set of thorns, before you are caught by another.