I know you guys are saying it's not legal, yeah? But to me, we are just attempting love, you know? I feel like I have been vindicated with that. Like, I'm attempting love in various degree of disaster. It's not like the love you guys are attempting are not disastrous, you know? And also look at that place where, I think the imagery, actually, one thing about recent pieces, you have like this beautiful imagery that you have to actually think really hard for you to be able to really hit the point.
You know, when he was talking about the top of Mount Everest is far-fetched. Settling for the peak of Kirimanjaro is not a failure. I was thinking about myself.
Maybe perfect love is Everest, yeah? And then what is Kirimanjaro here? Why do you have to, why do settling for the peak of Kirimanjaro not a failure? But then, I feel like this poem is also offering you like a consolation. You know, if you can't achieve this, achieve that. And I feel like, for me, I would have called it pessimism, but it's not.
That is honest, ambition, recalibrated. These are two mountains, yeah? And they have like specific geography. If you can't achieve this particular one, it's okay for you to take the other one.
So I can go on and on about how peace is brilliant and very, I wouldn't say very logical and very practical and the imagery was beautiful. And even the poem even described half of all, so many things in relationship. And it's remarkable, yeah? And it's even very philosophical because the idea that love is even cellular or biological or even written into us.