Brielle Miano’s Reviews > Why We Need Love: Eye-Opening Philosophical Essays―A Provocative Collection by Acclaimed Author Simon Van Booy > Status Update
Brielle Miano
is on page 165 of 237
Finished the Miller’s part in the Canterbury Tales — good heavens, I’m scarred for life but also entertained beyond measure. That was hilarious.
— Mar 19, 2021 07:05PM
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Brielle Miano
is on page 226 of 237
I’m blown away by Krishnamurti’s talk on love: our thoughts wear patterns in our mind and block flexible thought - we have to be aware of our ways of thinking. Selfish love about possession isn’t love at all. We can’t experience love if we seek it out, and everything we think about love is wrong, because it doesn’t come from the conscious ego and isn’t about thought or the mind at all.
— Mar 31, 2021 07:01PM
Brielle Miano
is on page 211 of 237
On the James Joyce fiction — a powerful tale of how fear disguised as morality/propriety can hurt. It hits a little close to home when you see your own tendency of withdrawn-ness leading someone else to such loneliness and regret. I don’t want to be "outcast from life’s feast" either.
— Mar 29, 2021 06:58PM
Brielle Miano
is on page 188 of 237
Really enjoyed the objective overview of human mating behavior — sheds light on all the ways we romanticize/fetishize the act of sex itself. Also glad to see a Brontë quote!!
— Mar 27, 2021 06:59PM
Brielle Miano
is on page 131 of 237
A surprisingly not-too-structurally unsound e.e. cummings poem; it’s beautiful in its fragility and recurring metaphors. Romeo and Juliet seems much less creepy when framed in this context.
— Mar 15, 2021 06:33PM
Brielle Miano
is on page 121 of 237
Whoof, John Donne is a little out there but I think I get it! He writes really sweet love poems for a metaphysical dude.
— Mar 09, 2021 07:04PM
Brielle Miano
is on page 111 of 237
Paul reminds me a lot of Madame Bovary — both have an insatiable, ridiculous desire for the finer things in life that makes it hard to sympathize with them. They think money is what’ll make them happy. But while she is fueled by greed and ennui, he’s clearly suffering with anxiety and daddy issues. I feel for him much more — he really does, in fact, need love.
— Mar 04, 2021 07:22PM
Brielle Miano
is on page 72 of 237
Forget Hafiz; his poems gutted ME like a fish.
— Feb 28, 2021 07:11PM
Brielle Miano
is on page 68 of 237
I actually really enjoyed the image of the Virgin Mary and Jesus - reflected on that in my morning prayer. Interesting how the painting portrays love as intrinsic to Christian religion, while the Arnold poem sees love as the only thing left without religion. Must mean it exists for all cultures and peoples regardless of background or creed.
— Feb 27, 2021 07:08PM
Brielle Miano
is on page 62 of 237
So far the poems/quotes have encompassed lots of facets of love - foolish love, perspective-limited love, predatory love, sacrificial love. I especially liked William Blake’s "The Clod and the Pebble." The book is really revealing to me just how intrinsic love is to our world - we show that we love each other so often in so many ways.
— Feb 23, 2021 07:05PM
Brielle Miano
is on page 39 of 237
People in the reviews keep trashing "Silas Marner," but I think it had more relevance than they were saying. The disregard which the church and his friend had shown him and that which the real father had shown the girl did sort of bind them together as kindred "lone things" as he says. Giving TLC to a child can make you more mindful of giving that TLC back to yourself.
— Feb 18, 2021 07:14PM

