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| | THE GREAT JOURNEY |
 | | They are more important for our development than our siblings, school, friends, society, the economic system, nationality, social class, or religion; they are also a highly determining factor in a child's future, as is stated in the adage, "like father, like son". |
 | | Herein lies the great dilemma: whether to continue this moment, where spontaneity and passion lead to happiness, claiming the right of pursuing one's most intimate impulses, or whether to continue with the mechanical, enslaving, and miserly routine devoid of pleasure. |
 | | To change means to pack one's bags for a journey in which neither the destination nor the itinerary are quite clear. |
| www.tarotterapeutico.info /ingles/great_journey.htm (6238 words) |
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