You can live your fullest with someone, laugh with someone, love someone, and suddenly it's all gone. You want to reach out to them and hold them, but an invisible barrier has sprung up, we behave like strangers, when only the week before we had been whispering how much we loved each other.
That's how it is with relationships, it's part of life, and all the great love songs and poems and films have been written by people who were standing where i was that afternoon as they shut the door. Doesn't make it easier though.
Tis better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all This quote has been used for centuries as both persuasion in favor of loving and also as comfort in times of heartbreak and loss. However, is this statement completely true, or does it offer false hope to anguishing lovers? In fact, are the rules and costs of loving and being loved so great that in fact it is actually better to never have loved at all? When pondering these questions, one must first consider the rules of loving and being loved to determine the physical, emotional, and psychological costs they entail.
A Soul of water,
A Soul of stone.
A Soul by name,
A Soul unknown.
The hours unmake
our flesh and bone.
The Soul is all;
and all alone.
It was as though heaven itself was giving vent to it's anguish
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