Desire can never be eliminated. Rather, desire can only be repressed or sublimated. If desire is repressed, the outcome is hysteria and neurosis. If desire is sublimated, it is the outcome of education and sexual freedom. If the societal aim and goal becomes one of stamping out desire through prohibition as is the case in … Continue reading Second Note to “Laila (Part Three)”
Author: adamazim1988
Note to “Laila (Part Three)”
Conflict and war obviously dampen and sour the energy and the vibes. Which is why the main priority was to analyze and study conflict and war. And if one were to guess, conflict and war loom large over the dynamics with the beloved as well. Arguably, the conflict and war and the dynamics involving the … Continue reading Note to “Laila (Part Three)”
“Laila (Part Three)”
https://videopress.com/v/lhP0u3OU?resizeToParent=true&cover=true&preloadContent=metadata&useAverageColor=true Rough Translation: “And as they said, the energy and the vibes are dark and gloomy for some reason. Add to it the fact that the beloved doesn’t respond to my cries and my letters, and it makes a bad situation even worse. And what makes all of that even worse is that I lose … Continue reading “Laila (Part Three)”
Fourth Note to “Laila (Part Two)”
Moreover, beyond the appeasement of the beloved, it’s the exact same as before and an exact repeat of the past, which is to watch Rome and the Great Satan burn and collapse from afar and to watch all of it in a very familiar state of loneliness and isolation. And you’re entitled to be peculiar … Continue reading Fourth Note to “Laila (Part Two)”
Third Note to “Laila (Part Two)”
Peculiar and stubborn in terms of preference and taste, and on top of it all, willing to burn bridges and alienate everyone in order to get to where one wants to get is perhaps the message or theme of it all. And how Afghan folk can express all of it is beyond me, but it … Continue reading Third Note to “Laila (Part Two)”