Crossing Allenby Bridge Quotes

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Crossing Allenby Bridge Crossing Allenby Bridge by Michael Looft
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Crossing Allenby Bridge Quotes Showing 1-7 of 7
“Never a fan of riding horses, I still appreciated its significance in what little philosophy I remember from school. The allegoric image of a charioteer struggling to maintain control of a white and a black horse pursuing separate courses from Plato’s Phaedrus always kept me wondering whether my own passions and desires could be kept in check by a higher reasoning function. I suppose I keep the black horse on my wall as a reminder to pay attention to the demands of my irrational side, but with an eye of keeping it from wresting control of my life. Of course, it keeps me in a constant state of struggle where some days, like the time with Bold and his family, I feel each horse gaining primacy over the course of a single hour.”
Michael Looft, Crossing Allenby Bridge
“I realized that the world I had known before, the world that was so easy to navigate, no longer became so easy because I had stepped out of it and into another one more alive and real. Nevertheless, this new world provided nourishment to a deeper part of me that had been hungry for a long time. Maybe it would get easier someday.”
Michael Looft, Crossing Allenby Bridge
“That is the witchcraft you poor deluded fool. Each man sees in her the sweetheart of his soul.”
Michael Looft, Crossing Allenby Bridge
“You know, Mark. I hate to bring this up, but you are living in San Francisco. Best city in the world as far as I’m concerned, but it’s a transient one renowned for its part-time Buddhists and general flightiness. I really hope you haven’t succumbed to these spiritual vices.”
Michael Looft, Crossing Allenby Bridge
“Even though part of me passed it off as rubbish, I still had another part that believed there to be some truth in it. When no one was looking I read my daily horoscope each morning, hoping for a five-star day. Anything less than four stars and I didn’t bother reading it. Deep down, all that stuff gave me the heebie-jeebies.”
Michael Looft, Crossing Allenby Bridge
“I noticed a small frame of parch paper with a quote in calligraphy hanging outside next to the door: “Respect Buddha and the gods, but don’t count on their help.” – Miyamoto Musashi, The Book of Five Rings. I had no idea who this Musashi guy was, but he tickled me with that line.”
Michael Looft, Crossing Allenby Bridge
“eyes. Later, I would identify that conversation as a turning point for me. In fact, it was also the moment when I”
Michael Looft, Crossing Allenby Bridge