Quote of the Day – 10162025


Personal Reflection

Pascal wasn’t dismissing reason — he was reminding us that logic alone can’t explain why we ache, why we love the wrong people, why we stay when leaving would make sense. The heart lives by its own compass, unbothered by the tidy arguments of the mind.

We try to dissect our feelings until they make sense, but the heart resists translation. It knows things reason can’t touch — the weight of silence, the pull of memory, the strange faith that something unseen still matters. To live by reason alone is to flatten experience into facts; to live only by the heart is to drown in its tide. The tension between the two is where we become human — trembling, inconsistent, and alive.

Maybe the heart’s “reasons” aren’t irrational but ancient — the echo of something older than language, something that recognizes meaning long before we can explain it. The challenge isn’t to silence one or the other but to let them speak in turn: the mind for direction, the heart for purpose.

Because the truth is, reason can chart the path — but only the heart can tell us why we’re walking it.


Reflective Prompt

When has your heart led you somewhere reason warned against? Did it end in ruin or revelation — and what did it teach you about the cost of trusting what cannot be explained?

2 thoughts on “Quote of the Day – 10162025

  1. This reminds me of one of my favorite quotes, by Lawrence Ferlinghetti of City Lights Booksellers in San Francisco, muse to the beat generation, publisher of Allen Ginsberg’s ‘Howl’: “Forgive us our trespasses on love’s territory.”

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