I no longer ask humans, for a definition of love. For, they tend to force on her, the traits of those who have either treated them well or not at all.
OBEHI VESSEL A.Second chances, are filled with humans hoping for a third.
More Obehi Vessel A. Quotes
-
-
Never give a human the job of making you happy. Some days, they might call you sick. Other days they might call quit.
OBEHI VESSEL A. -
And, when it comes to counting our blessings; we humans are all bad at math.
OBEHI VESSEL A. -
No. I do not wish upon stars, I hear they fall.
OBEHI VESSEL A. -
Ran out of time, before we even began. How long will the road not taken be starved of footprints?
OBEHI VESSEL A. -
Doing good and being good; are two different things. The first is a shirt we put on, take off. The latter is our skin.
OBEHI VESSEL A. -
When one door closes, another opens.’ Yet, in-between lies a wait persuasive enough to make many go through windows.
OBEHI VESSEL A. -
A problem ignored, has two outcomes. The illusion that it is gone, and the reality of one problem becoming more.
OBEHI VESSEL A. -
And now, we look back at what was normal, and we find that normal isn’t always good or right; No. Normal, is whatever has been spent with us, the longest time. And that in itself is not a valid reason for it to stay.
OBEHI VESSEL A. -
I have seen humans call for “change” only to bid her go home, and return on a more convenient date.
OBEHI VESSEL A. -
How abstract we humans sound, when we say these are dark times. As though it isn’t in our hands that paint our times.
OBEHI VESSEL A. -
Toxicity isn’t always a harsh tone or a bruise. Often it’s a “this is who I am.” Often it’s a “I’ll change” Void of when.
OBEHI VESSEL A. -
There is no such thing as ‘little’ acts of kindness. Every kind act, is grand powerful. Meant to take up space.
OBEHI VESSEL A. -
A natural law; ‘forgive them or become them.’ slowly, unnoticeably, surely.
OBEHI VESSEL A. -
Standing between who we are, and who we want to be, is that which we find easiest to be.
OBEHI VESSEL A. -
It seems to be, that there are dual reasons why justice is rarely given. One, too little evidence. Two, too much.
OBEHI VESSEL A.






