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Love for a lifetime


"You know, men approach this in a different way. Ever seen that movie, Le Haine? At the end of the movie the guy jumps out of an airplane but doesn’t open his parachute right away. Only 3,000 meters to go and still won’t open it. Only 2,500 meters to go and still won’t open it. Only 2,000 meters to go and still won’t open it. Only 1,500 meters to go and still won’t open it. Only 1,000 meters to go and still won’t open it. Only 500 and still won’t open it. Only 400 and still won’t open it. Only 100 meters to go and still won’t open it. Then just before impact he panics: “Jesus, now I really should do something, I’m too close to the ground!” It’s pretty similar to what men do when they feel a relationship is approaching the final stage. We tend to delay things while we can, the longer, the better. We only make a move if it’s really the eleventh hour." /from Love for a lifetime/
If you want to know more about the writer please visit: agathaseymour.com

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Daily inspiration

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Evening thought

Now and then journalists in search of copy ask me what is the most thrilling moment of my life. If I were not ashamed to, I might answer that it is the moment when I began to read Goethe’s Faust. I have never quite lost this feeling, and even now the first pages of a book sometimes send the blood racing through my veins. To me reading is a rest as to other people conversation or a game of cards. It is more than that; it is a necessity, and if I am deprived of it for a little while I find myself as irritable as the addict deprived of his drug. I would sooner read a time-table or a catalogue than nothing at all. That is putting it too low. I have spent many delightful hours poring over the price-list of the Army and Navy Stores, the lists of second-hand took-sellers and the A.B.C. All these are redolent of romance. They are much more entertaining than half the novels that are written. /W.S.Maugham/