Why is it that the things we often want the most (both material and intangible) are those that we cannot have? Is the value in the unattainability? But where is the value if one'll never have it? Or what if one does get it, does it become less valuable, or does one become fulfilled? And then what?
"What is it when you see a person's beauty?
What exactly is it that you want?
Do you feel the need to hold possesion?
Where is the love in that?"
"What is it when you see a person's beauty?
What exactly is it that you want?
Do you feel the need to hold possesion?
Where is the love in that?"
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The unexpected complications when things attained feeds the thought patterns of a cynics brain.
When the intangible becomes material, it become normal and the new ideas form and create the intangible, this is the conceptual cycle.
The value of intangible has only value through what the conceiver gives the intangible.
Material items have their own independent value, thus when the intangible becomes material it value may not be symmetrical to what was originaly conceived.
"What is it when you see a person's beauty?"
The spirit taking hold of you as it fights for your soul
"What exactly is it that you want?"
Connection
"Do you feel the need to hold possesion?"
With less security in life brings more need for possesion
"Where is the love in that?"
Love can exist in these, if you can work in the expressions to share, if what is concieved can bring its own life to the expression.
This is love to me.
[Edited on Mar 06, 2004 4:20AM]