My Blog is not supposed to be visually appealing...It stands for my beliefs...

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Reaction

On your palm an endless wonder

Lines that speak the truth without a sound

In your eyes awaits the tireless hunger

Already looks for prey to run down

Where's the cooling wind



Where's the evergreen field

Where's my mother's open arms
Where's my father lionheart
S'like the sun's gone down
Sleeps in the hallowed ground now
With the autumn's browns leaves
With the one who never grieves

What does tomorrow want with me
What does it matter what I see
If we all walk behind the blind
Tell me where do we draw the line

Poets Of The Fall- Where do we draw the line?

What should you feel... What should you feel when that apparition... that apparition that rejoiced in your evident demise... should itself be lost in the darkness... the same darkness which they had craved for you to be lost in... Should we choose our facade... Smiling, rejoicing in their pain... or switch sides... take its side and share in its grief... wailing and weeping for the pain that it bears.... or should we just let it go... let it go... it meant nothing to me... no rejoice... no sorrow... neutrality... be the one who never grieves... the one who looks at pleasure in one eye and pain in the other... like Brutus?

Humankind cannot gain anything without first giving something in return. To obtain, something of equal value must be lost. That is alchemy's First Law of Equivalent Exchange. In those days, we really believed that to be the world's one, and only, truth. But the world isn't perfect, and the law is incomplete. Equivalent Exchangedoesn't encompass everything that goes on here. But I still choose to believe in its principle: that all things do come at a price. That there's an ebb, and a flow, a cycle. That the pain we went through did have a reward and that anyone who's determined and perseveres will get something of value in return, even if it's not what they expected. I don't think of Equivalent Exchange as a law of the world anymore. I think of it as a promise between my brother and me - a promise that someday, we'll see each other again.

— Alphonse Elric