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なかのPC部屋

個人的な日記と PC系の記事を書いています。最近は主に https://akiba.ninja-web.net/naka/ で記事を投稿しています。

Jan_twardowski_spieszmy_sie_kochac_ludzi_tak_sz... [TESTED]

Put the phone away and look people in the eye.

What makes Jan Twardowski’s writing so accessible is his "smiling theology." He doesn't lecture from a high pedestal; he speaks as a friend who observes the world—including its "awkward sounds" and "dry bows."

If life is short, holding onto grudges is a waste of precious time. jan_twardowski_spieszmy_sie_kochac_ludzi_tak_sz...

Here is a blog post draft that explores the meaning and timelessness of this masterpiece.

We see these words everywhere—on cemetery gates, in social media bios, and on commemorative plaques. But when Father Jan Twardowski penned these lines in his poem dedicated to fellow poet Anna Kamieńska, he wasn't just looking for a catchy phrase. He was offering a profound, slightly paradoxical, and deeply human philosophy of life. The Fragility of "Later" Put the phone away and look people in the eye

While many associate this poem with mourning, its message is equally about the . Twardowski notes that "those who do not depart do not always return." People change; circumstances shift. The person you love today might not be the same person a year from now.

Hurry to Love: Lessons from Jan Twardowski’s Most Famous Poem "Let us hurry to love people, they depart so quickly." We see these words everywhere—on cemetery gates, in

Learn more about the life of the "Priest Who Wrote Poems" via his biography on Culture.pl.