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《Have a Little Faith》读后感100字

《Have a Little Faith》读后感100字

《Have a Little Faith》是一本由Mitch Albom著作,Hachette Books出版的Hardcover图书,本书定价:USD 23.99,页数:272,特精心收集的读后感,希望对大家能有帮助。

《Have a Little Faith》读后感(一):The only whole heart is a broken heart.

Lord Above

I needed help... for I'm not determined and have no patience.

Was that you? So that I could have myself waited, for the longest time there could possibly be, for the traffic light to turn green...

《Have a Little Faith》读后感(二):一点点感想,关于信念

某个非假日的早晨,阳光照进我的小阁楼里,照在我的床上。我揉揉眼睛起床。上一周经历了两天的牢狱,还有一天的奔忙,这是我第一次睡的很自然。

就在昨天晚上,女朋友发短信告诉我:我不能等你了。我只需要一个人陪我,你在外面做不到。就在我经历了两天的牢狱之后。没有安慰。只有一句:希望你理解。我说:嗯,那就这样吧。

于是我把椅子搬到窗前,背对着阳光,阳光照在我的背上,很舒服。我开始读这本书,一直读到天黑。

Faith有信仰和信念两层含义,我相信这本书说的是后者,尽管作者穿插介绍的是关于他与一个犹太教拉比和一个基督教黑人牧师交往的经历。因为如果是前者,对于一个没有信仰的中国人,这本书对我毫无意义。信仰是因人而异可有可无的,可信念却是有普遍意义不可缺少的。那是关于爱和友情,关于忠诚和友善,关于一切美好的事物。

在这本书里,我读到了什么叫爱。当Henry被判刑后,在去监狱前他告诉他的女朋友Annette,我不期望你能等我七年。Annette告诉他:如果是二十五年,你回来我还在这里等你。七年中的每个周末的深夜,Annette乘巴士花费6小时路程去监狱看望Henry,当她到监狱的时候太阳已经升起了。他们俩牵着手聊天打牌,直到探监时间结束。当七年后Henry出狱,他们结婚了。Annette本可以说:希望你理解。。。可是她没有。正如老Reb所说:

“Love—the infatuation kind—‘he’s so handsome, she’s so beautiful’—that can shrivel. As soon as something goes wrong, that kind of love can fly out the window.

“On the other hand, a true love can enrich itself. It gets tested and grows stronger. Like in Fiddler on the Roof. You remember? When Tevye sings ‘Do You Love Me?’?”

“When she says, ‘How can you ask if I love you? Look at all I’ve done with you. What else would you call it?’

“That kind of love—the kind you realize you already have by the life you’ve created together—that’s the kind that lasts.

在读到了关于面对死亡的那段,我想到了我自己。比死亡更可怕的是第二次死亡。在开普敦的植物园里,我看到了很多椅子和饮水池上写着:捐赠被xxx夫妇。。。尽管她们已经不在人世了。他们的亲友会记住他们,他们仍活在记忆中。

Henry的教堂让我想起了在卢旺达时,在湖边遇到的那个没有房顶的教堂。上帝不住人手所造的殿,富丽堂皇的教堂和破旧不堪的教堂一样,仅仅是一个具有象征意义的建筑物而已。事实上,只要有相信上帝的人聚集在一起祷告,上帝就和他们在一起了。

面对苦难,人们不能够从上帝那里得到直接的帮助,只能去想:上帝这么做总是有理由的。安慰无助的自己。Reb说:如果我们没有信仰,我们从什么地方来寻求帮助呢?我不赞成。。。没有信仰的人同样可以找到内心的安慰。

与《For one more day》相比,这一次Mitch没有给我们更多的惊喜。Reb更像是犹太拉比版的Morrie。他们的睿智和经历都可以拿来相比较。

Mitch在Reb葬礼上的讲话是全书的总线也是总结。老Reb若在天上有知会很欣慰的。

《Have a Little Faith》读后感(三):读Mitch Albom的书真是享受

这一周在读一本Mitch Albom(米奇·阿尔博姆)的书——《Have a little faith》(《来一点信仰》)。然后我发现自己读什么书,就会在生活中遇见与书中内容相关的事情。当然这不是巧合,而是在读一本的书的时候,你会无意识关注生活中与之相关的一切,然后触发大脑的一些想法。

这个就该是读书的力量。你没有刻意记忆什么,甚至不是每天都在坚持读。你读的零零落落,生怕自己过于沉浸书本,遗忘生活。但是一些东西就这么悄无声息地进入你的大脑,融入你的生活,这么自然地成为你的一部分。慢慢地,它变成了一种乐趣,一段令你享受的时光。

米奇的这本书关于信仰,但不仅仅限于信仰。他这里的信仰有关宗教,但不是在介绍教派理念和教徒生活。他在讲人从信仰里获取的一种积极的力量:满足、感恩、给予、宽容、和平……这种力量拯救了一个堕落的灵魂,同时塑造了另一个拯救者的灵魂。

米奇没有试图让这本书显得多么玄学和脱俗,他谈到了人在生活和抉择中所面临的困境。这是他的一贯风格,几乎每本书都是直问生死,都是从老者、垂死者、死者的角度出发。跟老者谈论人生和抉择(本书《来一点信仰》《相约星期二》),让他们在垂死中获得救赎(《一日重生》),让死者的灵魂重新审视自己的生活从而获得安宁(《你在天堂里遇见的五个人》)。只是一本100页多点的小书,也只有这么四本。这样的直面生死和人性,直接戳到人内心最深处,让你冰冷的心充盈热度;让你不再孤独,让你充满依靠,让你看到希望,让你从内心去感知到那些最本质的东西。

这是多么老生常谈的道理,又那么容易被丢失和遗忘。米奇在讨论这一切的时候都没有空谈,他立足于生活和细节,仔细地剖析自己和别人。读他的书真是一种享受。他借助老者和智者之口,让你一次次跟随他,和这些老者智者平和地交谈。

米奇也很善于安排写作顺序。他了解现代人接收信息时快餐式风格。他不是讲一个故事从头叙述到尾。在《相约星期二》是,他讲了14趟课分14个片段,除此之外中间还夹杂着他之前上Morrie教授课时的回忆。同样在《你在天堂里遇见的五个人》也是:五个人分五个片段,中间夹杂生前跟这五个人的生活片段,以及主人公从小到大过生日的场景回忆。其他两本也是如此。这种叙述方式不仅丰富了内容,时空上的频繁转换充满画面感,也使读者不至于很快厌倦。

我这个人不喜欢看小说,觉得枯燥。我自己没有耐心,道行太浅看不进去。米奇的小说我倒是读得很欢快。书不厚是一个原因,写得好还是最关键的。

舅妈是一个普普通通的农民,也有农家妇人身上的那些缺点:琐屑唠叨,神经过敏,后来有一段时间得了抑郁症。她是一个基督徒,但不那么纯粹。得了抑郁症,每天郁郁寡欢看不到自己活着的价值,但每天还有意识做祷告,周末还要去教堂做礼拜,说要“让主救赎”。她睡觉前做祷告,对主说自己病了,但相信主会给自己有最好的安排,会给自己指一条明路让自己好起来。后来她去石家庄看病,然后再那里呆了一个月,之后回来病好了。

她给我说,觉得自己病了是被魔鬼缠住了。现在好了,就要感谢主,更加追随。她说自己现在一遇到纠结的事情,就跟主说,相信主会给最好的安排,所以就不多想了,交给主去安排吧。

我想起《来一点信仰》里面,其中一个主人公亨利贩毒、偷盗,后来在一次最危险的逃避追杀中祈祷:上帝,如果你让我逃过这一劫,我便相信你,追随你,不再继续这种生活。后来他活下来了,成了一位牧师,开始了另一种生活。还有一个故事写到无神论者对牧师的嫉妒:你们可以质问神,责备神,向他发泄,可我不相信他的存在,只能责备自己。

你看,有个信仰也挺好的吧。无论是什么信仰,只要你能依靠就好。

无关于戒律,无关于对自己的约束,只是有依靠的力量。相信充满苦难充满失望的时候,上帝与你同在。而且他会有更好的安排,卸下你的担子给他吧!他会帮你撑起来!

信仰就是这样的。你抗累了,可以丢下不管。你相信会有另一种力量替你扛起来。

《来一点信仰》里,就是在指明这种力量。还有由这种力量获得的宽容和感恩。

《Have a Little Faith》读后感(四):内容摘录

全部抄完了才想起豆瓣有读书笔记这玩意儿,但要按页码敲进去太麻烦了,直接贴在这,请见谅。

P26

I once thought churches and temples were like hills, permanent in location and singular in shape. The truth is, many go where the customers go.

...But what stays the same in life?

P28

“Lovely, isn’t it?

What?

“Life,” he said.

P36

…things which grow quickly are often more easily destroyed than those which take a long time.

P44

Faith is about doing. You are how you act, not just how you believe.

P47

How do you not get cynical?

He stopped.

“There is no room for cynicism in this line of work.”

But people are so flawed. They ignore ritual, they ignore faith—they even ignore you. Don’t you get tired of trying?

He studied me sympathetically. Maybe he realized what I was really asking: Why me?

“Let me answer with a story,” he said.” There’s this salesman, see? And he knocks on a door. The man who answers says,’I don’t need anything today.’

“The next day, the salesman returns.

“’Stay away,’ he is told.

“The next day, the sales man is back.

“The man yells,’You again! I warned you!’ He gets so angry, he spits in the sales man’s face.

“The salesman smiles, wipes the spit with a handkerchief, then looks to the sky and says,’ Must be raining.’

“Mitch, that’s what faith is. If they spit in your face, you say it must be raining. But you still come back tomorrow.”

P57

He had a way of looking you in the eye and making you feel the world had stopped and you were all that was in it.

P62

We were part of each other’s lives. If someone was about to slip, someone else could catch him.

P79

When you come to the end, that’s where God begins.

….He understood that the journey to belief was not straight, easy, or even always logical. He respected and educated argument, even if he didn’t agree with it.

P82

“Oh yes. It is far more comforting to think God listened and said no, than to think that nobody’s out there.”

P85

The only tyrant I accept in this world is the still voice within.—Mohandas Gandhi

P90

War never stops; it only pauses.

P91

You can sense man’s drumbeat to war. Vengeance rises. Tolerance is mocked. Over the years, I was taught why our side was right. And in another country someone my age was taught the opposite.

P93

(The story about “He sleeps in a storm”)

“My friends, if we tend to the things that are important in life, if we are right with those we love and behave in line with our faith, our lives will not be cursed with the aching throb of unfulfilled business. Our words will always be sincere, our embraces will be tight. We will never wallow in the agony of ‘I could have, I should have.’ We can sleep in a storm.

“And when it’s time, our good-byes will be complete.”

P98

Much of what we called ”depression” was really dissatisfaction, a result of setting a bar impossibly high or expecting treasures that we weren’t willing to work for. I knew people whose unbearable source of misery was their weight, their baldness, their lack of advancement in a workplace, or their inability to find the perfect mate, even if they themselves did not behave like one. To these people, unhappiness was a condition, an intolerable state of affairs. If pills could help, pills were taken.

P100

His morning prayers began with “Thank you, Lord, for returning my soul to me.”

When you start that way, the rest of the day is a bonus.

P101

“When a baby comes into the world, its hands are clenched, right? Like this?”

He made a fist.

“Why? Because a baby, not knowing any better, wants o grab everything, to say, ‘The whole world is mine.’

“But when an old person dies, how does he do so? With his hands open. Why? Because he has learned the lesson”

What lesson? I asked.

He stretched open his empty fingers.

“We can take nothing with us.”

P102

So, have we solved the secret of happiness?

“I believe so.” He said.

Are you going to tell me?

“Yes. Ready?”

Ready.

“Be satisfied.”

That’s it?

“Be grateful.”

That’s it?

“For what you have. For the love you receive. And for what God has given you.”

That’s it?

He looked me in the eye. Then he sighed deeply.

“That’s it.”

P115

…And the last time Albert Lewis judged life by what he owned.

(Means don’t judge your life by what you own.)

P126

What do people fear most about death? I asked the Reb.

“Fear?” He thought for a moment,” Well, for one thing, what happens next? Where do we go? Is it what we imagined?”

That’s big.

“Yes. But there’s something else.”

What else?

He leaned forward.

“Being forgotten,” he whispered.

P128

The second death. To think that you died and no one would remember you. I wondered if this was why we tried so hard to make our mark in America. To be known. Think of how important celebrity has become. We sing to get famous; expose our worst secrets to get famous; lose weight, eat bugs, even commit murder to get famous. Our young people post their deepest thoughts on public websites. They run cameras from their bedrooms. It’s as if we are screaming. Notice me! Remember me! Yet the notoriety barely lasts. Names quickly blur and in time are forgotten.

P138

Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself.

P143

“Love—the infatuation kind—‘he’s so handsome, she’s so beautiful’—that can shrivel. As soon as something goes wrong, that kind of love can fly out the window.

“On the other hand, a true love can enrich itself. It gets tested and grows stronger.”

P144

The only difference between ‘marital’ and ‘martial’ is where you put the ‘I.’”

P160

The genius of life is its variety.

“….It’s the blending of the different notes that makes the music.”

The music of what?

“Of believing in something bigger than yourself.”

P161

…you should be convinced of the authenticity of what you have, but you must also be humble enough to say that we don’t know everything. And since we don’t know everything, we must accept that another person may believe something else.”

P171

We were shouting just to be heard.

P174

On my way out, I took one last peek into the gym. I heard the steady hum of the blowers and saw the shadow bumps under blankets, some lying still, some tossing slightly. It’s hard to express what hit me then, except the thought that every one of those bumps was a man, everyman once a child, every child once held by his mother, and now this: a cold gym floor at the bottom of the world.

P178

What do you do when you lose a loved one too quickly?

When you have no time to prepare before, suddenly, that soul is gone?

P193

You are not your past.

P207

“Maybe all you get are chances to do good, and what little bad you do ain’t much bad at all. But because God has put you in the position where you can always do good, when you do something bad—it’s like you let God down.

“And maybe people who only get chances to do bad, always around bad things, like us, when they finally make something good out of it, God’s happy.”

P210

If you could pack for heaven, this was how you’d do it, touching everything, taking nothing.

P212

Nothing haunts like the things we don’t say.

P221

But I realized something as I drove home that night: that I am neither better nor smarted, only luckier. And I should be ashamed of thinking I knew everything, because you can know the whole world and still feel lost in it. So many people are in pain—no matter how smart or accomplished—they cry, they yearn, they hurt. But instead of looking down on things, they look up, which is where I should have been looking, too. Because when the world quiets to the sound of your own breathing, we all want the same things: comfort, love, and a peaceful heart.

P244

I thought about his dilapidated church downtown. And I realized that, in some ways, we all have a hole in our roof, a gap through which tears fall and bad events blow like harsh wind. We feel vulnerable; we worry about what storm will strike next.

But seeing Henry that day, being cheered by all those new faces, I believe, as the Reb once told me, that, with a little faith, people can fix things, and they truly can change, because at that moment, you could not believe otherwise.

P245

The human spirit is a thing to behold.

P249

I’m in love with hope.

《Have a Little Faith》读后感(五):Notes

1.Maybe I was too stubborn to change. Maybe it wasn't important enough to bother.

2. Things which grow quickly are often more easily destroyed than those which take a long time.

3. Faith is about doing. You are how you act, not just how you believe.

4. “Mitch, that’s what faith is. If they spit in your face, you say it must be raining. But you still come back tomorrow.”

5. He had a way of looking you in the eye and making you feel the world had stopped and you were all that was in it.

Maybe this was his gift to the job.

Or maybe it was the job's gift to him.

6. "We were part of each other's lives. If someone was about to slip, someone else could catch him."

7. When you come to the end, that's where God begins.

8. He understood that the journey to belief was not straight, easy, or even always logical. He respected and educated argument, even if he didn’t agree with it.

9. “Oh yes. It is far more comforting to think God listened and said no, than to think that nobody’s out there.”

10. The only tyrant I accept in this world is the still voice within. (Mohandas Gandhi)

11. "I just cried. The kindness that takes. The belief. Picking up pieces of your dead. This is who we are. This beautiful faith."

12. Most religions warn against war, yet more wars have been fought over religion than perhaps anything else.

13. "if we tend to the things that are important in life, if we are right with those we love and behave in line with our faith, our lives will not be cursed with the aching throb of unfulfilled business. Our words will always be sincere, our embraces will be tight. We will never wallow in the agony of ‘I could have, I should have.’ We can sleep in a storm.

“And when it’s time, our good-byes will be complete.”

14. Having more does not keep you from wanting more. And if you always want more - to be richer, more beautiful, more well known - you are missing the bigger picture, and I can tell you from experience, happiness will never come.

15. His morning prayers began with “Thank you, Lord, for returning my soul to me.”

When you start that way, the rest of the day is a bonus.

16. "...When a baby comes into the world, its hands are clenched. right? Like this?"

He made a fist.

"Why? Because a baby, not knowing any better, wants to grab everything, to say, ' the whole world is mine.'

"But when an old person dies, how does he do so? with his hands open. Why? Because he learned the lesson."

What lesson? I asked.

He stretched open his empty fingers.

"We can take nothing with us."

17.

So, have we solved the secret of happiness?

“I believe so.” He said.

Are you going to tell me?

“Yes. Ready?”

Ready.

“Be satisfied.”

That’s it?

“Be grateful.”

That’s it?

“For what you have. For the love you receive. And for what God has given you.”

That’s it?

He looked me in the eye. Then he sighed deeply.

“That’s it.”

18. Charity begins at home, and helping your own kind should come first.

19.

God and the decision he renders is correct.

God doesn't punish anyone out of the blue.

God knows what he is doing.

That was the last they spoke of it.

And the last time Albert Lewis judged life by what he owned.

20. What profits a man if he gains the whole world, but loses his soul?

21.

What do people fear most about death? I asked the Reb.

“Fear?” He thought for a moment,” Well, for one thing, what happens next? Where do we go? Is it what we imagined?”

That’s big.

"Yes. But there’s something else.”

What else?

He leaned forward.

“Being forgotten,” he whispered.

22.

The second death. To think that you died and no one would remember you. I wondered if this was why we tried so hard to make our mark in America. To be known. Think of how important celebrity has become. We sing to get famous; expose our worst secrets to get famous; lose weight, eat bugs, even commit murder to get famous. Our young people post their deepest thoughts on public websites. They run cameras from their bedrooms. It’s as if we are screaming. Notice me! Remember me! Yet the notoriety barely lasts. Names quickly blur and in time are forgotten.

23.

"That is why," the Reb said, "faith is so important. It is a rope for us all to grab, up and down the mountain. I may not be remembered in so many years. But what I believe and have taught - about God, about our tradition - that can go on. It comes from my parents and their parents before them. And if it stretches to my grandchildren and to their grandchildren, then we are all, you know..."

Connected?

"That's it."

24.

Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself.

25.

“Love—the infatuation kind—‘he’s so handsome, she’s so beautiful’—that can shrivel. As soon as something goes wrong, that kind of love can fly out the window.

"A true love can enrich itself. It gets tested and grows stronger. Like in Fiddler on the Roof. You remember? When Tevye sings 'Do you Love me?'?"

I should have seen this coming. I think Fiddler on the Roof was pretty much the Reb's worldview. Religion. Tradition. Community. And a husband and wife - Tevye and Golde - whose love is proven through action, not words.

26.

That kind of love - the kind you realize you already have by the life you've created together - that's the kind that lasts.

27.

The only difference between 'marital' and 'martial' is where you put the 'i'.

28.

"I think people expect too much from marriage today," he said. "They expect perfection. Every moment should be bliss. That's TV or movies. But that is not the human experience.

...It's okay to have an argument. It's okay that the other one nudges you a little, bothers you a little. It's part of being close to someone.

29.

You might find another woman, but you will never find your wife.

30.

That prayer - and the word "one" - were integral to the Reb's beliefs. One, as in the singular God. One, as in the Lord's creation. Adam.

"Ask yourself, why did God create by one man?..."

"Because we are all from that one man- and all from that one God. That's the message."

31.

The genius of life is its variety.

“Even in our own faith, we have questions and answers, interpretations, debates. In Christianity, in Catholicism, in other faiths, the same thing - debates, interpretations. That is the beauty. It's like being a musician. If you found the note, and you kept hitting that note all the time, you would go nuts. It’s the blending of the different notes that makes the music.”

The music of what?

“Of believing in something bigger than yourself.”

32.

you should be convinced of the authenticity of what you have, but you must also be humble enough to say that we don’t know everything. And since we don’t know everything, we must accept that another person may believe something else.

33.

But you can touch everything and be connected to nothing.

34.

What do you do when you lose a loved one too quickly?

When you have no time to prepare before, suddenly, that soul is gone?

35.

We are all frail parts of something powerful.

36.

"If you ask me, and you should, why this wonderful, beautiful child- who had so much to give- had to die. I can't give you a rational answer. I don't know.

"But in a commentary to the Bible, tradition tells us that Adam, our first man, was supposed to have lived longer than any man, a thousand years. He didn't. Our sages, in quest of an answer, related the following:

"Adam begged God to let him see into the future. So the Lord said, 'Come with me.' He took him through the celestial chambers, where the souls that were to be born awaited their turn. Each soul was a flame. Adam saw some flames burn purely, some barely flicker.

"Then he saw a beautiful flame, clear, strong, golden orange, and healing. Adam said, 'Oh Lord, that will be a great human being. When shall it be born?'

"The Lord replied, ' I'm sorry, Adam, but that soul, as beautiful as it is, is destined not to be born. It has been preordained that it will commit sin and tarnish itself. I have chosen to spare it the indignity of being besmirched.'

"Adam pleaded, 'But Lord, man must have someone to teach and guide him. Please,do not deprive my children.'

"The Lord gently answered, 'The decision has been made. I have no years left to allocate to him.'

"Then Adam boldly said, 'Lord, what if I am willing to bestow on that soul some of the years of my life?'

"And God answered Adam, saying, ' if that is your wish, that i will grant.'

"Adam, we are told, died not at 1,000, but at 930 years. And eons later, there was a child born in the town of Bethlehem. He became a ruler over Israel and a sweet singer of songs. After leading his people and inspiring them, he died. And the Bible concludes: 'Behold, David the King was buried after having lived for 70 years.'

...

While he lived, David taught, inspired, and left us a great spiritual legacy, including the book of Psalms. One of those Psalms, the twenty-third, is read sometimes at funerals.

"The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want. He maketh me to lie down in green pastures. He leadeth me beside the still waters. He restoreth my soul..."

"Is it not better to have known Rinah, my daughter, for four years, than not to have known her at all?"

37.

You are not your past.

38.

...same things in life can be good or evil,depending on what, with free will, we do with them. Speech can bless or curse. Money can save or destroy. Science can heal or kill. Even nature can work for you or against you: fire can warm or burn; water can sustain life or flood it away.

39.

"..from the beginning, God said, 'I'm gonna put this world into your hands. If I run everything, then that's not you.' So we were created with a piece of divinity inside us, but with this thing called free will, and I think God watches us every day, lovingly, praying we will make the right choices."

40.

The story of my recent life. I like that phrase. It makes more sense than the story of my life, because we get so many lives between birth and death. A life to be a child. A life to come of age. A life to wander, to settle, to fall in love, to parent, to test our promise, to realize our morality - and, in some lucky cases, to do something after the realization.

41.

“Maybe all you get are chances to do good, and what little bad you do ain’t much bad at all. But because God has put you in the position where you can always do good, when you do something bad—it’s like you let God down.

“And maybe people who only get chances to do bad, always around bad things, like us, when they finally make something good out of it, God’s happy.”

42.

Nothing haunts like the things we don't say.

43.

I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit in you;

I will remove from you your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh.

Ezekiel 36:26

44.

But I realized something as I drove home that night: that I am neither better nor smarted, only luckier. And I should be ashamed of thinking I knew everything, because you can know the whole world and still feel lost in it. So many people are in pain—no matter how smart or accomplished—they cry, they yearn, they hurt. But instead of looking down on things, they look up, which is where I should have been looking, too. Because when the world quiets to the sound of your own breathing, we all want the same things: comfort, love, and a peaceful heart.

45.

We who are born, are born to die.

46.

Remember the memories.

47.

The only whole heart is a broken heart.

48,

I thought about his dilapidated church downtown. And I realized that, in some ways, we all have a hole in our roof, a gap through which tears fall and bad events blow like harsh wind. We feel vulnerable; we worry about what storm will strike next.

But seeing Henry that day, being cheered by all those new faces, I believe, as the Reb once told me, that, with a little faith, people can fix things, and they truly can change, because at that moment, you could not believe otherwise.

49.

The human spirit is a thing to behold.

50.

I’m in love with hope.

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