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When The Calm Heart Was Desolated!

 

Let me start with Sigmund Freud’s quote: “Unexpressed emotions will never die. They are buried alive and will come forth later in uglier ways.”

At the beginning of history, a calm heart was broken; even when Freud’s aphorism was put into action to obliterate the doubts of the shadow of dreams. Later on, it was depressed, stressed and wasn’t impressed at all.

And knowing that when innocent and vulnerable hearts are deserted, they would fall in solitudes. One modern thinker said, “when the heart is broken, the emotional pain is similar to physical pain.” Seneca said, “We suffer more often in imagination than in reality.” Leonardo da Vinci added, “tears come from the heart and not from the brain.”

Then, Cato the Younger, one of the Roman Statesmen said, “in doing nothing, men learn to do evil.” Hence, Mohiddeen Ahmad emphasized the axiom by giving this clarification: “broken hearts usually lose faith and sympathy and are more likely to adopt malice and loveless life.”

Mohiddeen once said, “being alone in another world is a great opportunity to escape the trap of fake people.” This is exactly a nice decision to make when one is abandoned and depressed. He added, “it is a big deal to understand someone’s pain, but for emotional hearts, it is as simple as to blink.”

Being in a coma and forlornity, negative thoughts were developed in such a way that the heart was filled with trash, and was later junked. But alas, even if the heart is to be reanimated, it could need life support —which could take scientists for decades to prop it into action.

 

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