Sunday, February 17, 2013

A Lion's Heart



The author just watched a Facebook footage of a woman and a lion which the woman saved from death. After that the author went to googled another video, which I remembered seeing many years ago, and of a lion and his old owners reunited on a rocky span in a jungle. The author choosed this footage as it was filmed during the author's younder age, the baby boomers, :). The readers will find more in YouTube.
 
Both videos are stunning chants of beasts’ love and affection for those they loved. Although one was caged while another was in nature place but both nevertheless told of beastly beauty and exceptions of derelict humanity. If you are critically harmed or censured by the one you trusted and loved, you will continue to love him or her that harmed or censured you. Like an animal, sometime, we do exhibit hasty moments that seemingly terminated a bond of love, but we know a true bond of love can never be annihilated. Of course, animals and humans are separated by a biased divide of intelligence, but pets of animals so often prove their loyalty are above man.
A relationship of love, platonic or not, may be broken but the sentiment of truth in love shall always preserve by at least one party. Such occurrences, in author’s life alone, have learned that happened among friends, and bond of love always perpetuate and deem reparable by at least one side. If a bond is not repaired, it will remain a token of virtue characterizing perpetuity and a resolute forgiver. Perhaps such token, to some, reflects futility or a waste of time, but lions do kill but simultaneously manifest remembrances of such token, such virtue. Why not human?
“Humans do have many great virtues, just that we need to practice and exercise more of these gifts.” – Nathan Phang

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