Experience, imagination, inner self, and state of being - all of which are essential and fundamental to an existential and phenomenological assessment and evaluation of both self and external reality - all point to you, my love. All is meaningless and pointless if you and I don’t come together and join forces.
“Kare Asheqi” – كار عاشقى
https://videopress.com/v/hpj7KG9M?resizeToParent=true&cover=true&preloadContent=metadata&useAverageColor=true Original: Folklore. Rough Translation: “Love and romance are bittersweet and are ridden with ups and downs. Melancholy and sadness also get in the way of it. Disappointment and grief lie in wait, ready to ambush. But I don’t blame anyone for my disappointments and failures in love and romance. It’s simply how this day … Continue reading “Kare Asheqi” – كار عاشقى
Eleventh Note to “Finding Jesus”
And if life is what we make of it through our existential and phenomenological experience and imagination, who is to blame when the blockages to where we want to go are overcome? Only we ourselves are to blame given that life is what we make of it through our existential and phenomenological experience and imagination. … Continue reading Eleventh Note to “Finding Jesus”
Tenth Note to “Finding Jesus”
“Being is there, and outside of it, nothing.” We constitute the world and then we negate it. And when we negate it, we are left with nothing but an existential and phenomenological experience and imagination that everyone will criticize and no one will understand.
Ninth Note to “Finding Jesus”
With spheres of influence, we reach the limits of foreign policy. Reaching spheres of influence in foreign policy is the equivalent of graduating from the 12th grade in high school or getting the 120 credits as an undergrad student or the 42 credits as a master’s student. It means you’re done with it. We’re done … Continue reading Ninth Note to “Finding Jesus”