“Dare to dream, dare to love, and dare to live.”
“Dare to live the truth of your myth.”
Source: Alien Parasites: 40 Gnostic Truths to Defeat the Archon Invasion!
“Sometimes in life you must pay to play but in the end the reward usually outweighs the risk.”
“Trust is a thin line that should be used effectively. The line between the Hell and Heaven”
Source: Key for the Next Generation Growth: Author: Human composer of the God played new tune
“In this world, there is no such sternness like that of maintaining silence. Verbal sternness will be wasted.”
“When a poet's mind is perfectly equipped for its work, it is constantly amalgamating disparate experience; the ordinary man's experience is chaotic, irregular, fragmentary. The latter falls in love, or reads Spinoza, and these two experiences have nothing to do with each other, or with the noise of the typewriter or the smell of cooking; in the mind of the poet these experiences are always forming new wholes.”
“The Christian experience is not primarily formed by our liturgy, doctrine, or ecclesiology, as important as those might be. We are formed by the dangerous stories of our great hero.”
Source: Exiles: Living Missionally in a Post-Christian Culture
“The truth is that our enjoyments and our evaluations, like our trades, are learned; intensive knowledge, as well as extensive, is acquired. We learn how to value possessions as well as how to make them; our passions, our disgusts, and our ambitions are learned. Just as we have evolved ways of transmuting physical elements from one to another, so we have evolved ways of transmuting experience into meaning.”
“Quando se deu conta disso, a tristeza avançou silenciosamente, como água. Era uma tristeza transparente, sem forma. A tristeza era dele mesmo, mas, ao mesmo tempo, se encontrava em algum lugar distante, longe do seu alcance. O peito doeu como se parte dele tivesse sido arrancada, e se sentiu sufocado.”
Source: Colorless Tsukuru Tazaki and His Years of Pilgrimage
“The most alarming part of this is not our bad habits, which we tend to know about. It's our collective assimilation, which is invisible to us.
As Annie Dillard says, "How we spend our days is of course, how we spend our lives." - Annie Dillard (p. 15)”
Source: The Common Rule: Habits of Purpose for an Age of Distraction