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“Life gave me lemons, then I met you and you had Vodka. Now my life is a party.”
anmol gandhi“However, amidst the bouquets of laughter that people tried to gift me, there was that memory of yours, lips curled up in a fashion, which makes my heart skip a beat even now. And then the happiness felt incomplete, because I missed you, missed you everyday more than the previous day.”
Anmol Rawat, A Little Chorus of Love“The way to my heart shattered when you left me, but I was glad because your memories were invulnerable, locked inside my heart.”
Anmol Rawat, A Little Chorus of Love“Every night, I laid awake with your memories flooding through my eyes with the hope to be with you when sleep arrived.”
Anmol Rawat, A Little Chorus of Love“If you can forget the person you love, you have not loved enough.”
Anmol Rawat, A Little Chorus of Love“Some people come in your life and make you believe that your life is incomplete without them. Then they leave, creating a void in your heart that may fill back with time but will never be complete.”
Anmol Rawat, A Little Chorus of Love“For sixteen years, I had seen just emptiness in those eyes. Her eloquent eyes had lost their expressiveness to destiny.”
Anmol Rawat, Blank Space : Filled with Inspiration“For generations, the Gandhi family has been more spiritual than religious. This may seem to be a contradiction, but it is not. The Gandhis have drawn a clear distinction between two terms. Spirituality refers to the aspiration of our true nature, and ultimate realization of the Self. Religion, on the other hand, as in many cases come to mean a dogmatic observance of rituals that one practices at specified times of the day or week.”
Arun Gandhi, Legacy of Love: My Education in the Path of Nonviolence“Tolstoy was a Caucasian, Gandhi was an Asian, and Martin Luther King Jr. was a Negro, yet all of their hearts were inspired by the one idea of nonviolent resistance. King received it from Gandhi, Gandhi received it from Tolstoy, and Tolstoy received it from Christ.”
Abhijit Naskar, We Are All Black: A Treatise on Racism