A generous heart. Different from magnanimity

September 24, 2024 Medicine of the Soul

In my opinion, this kind of relationship is profoundly out of date and perhaps meaningless.

Veronica Baker


A generous heart. Different from magnanimity

A generous heart
There are those who give and those who receive, but only in a sense…

It is wonderful to meet a generous heart.

Generosity, in my opinion, is expressed when a person has the ability to perceive what appears beyond the veil of conventions and behaviors that each of us allows to transpire for the sake of quiet living and sometimes opportunism.

A generous heart, on the other hand, understands the true essence and not what is shown or what is allowed to be seen.

Generosity can be given when we possess the fullness, when what we are endowed with is so superfluous that it can be given, shared, without fear of being without and without feeling the lack in ourselves.

This is different from the generosity that is given almost with sufficiency, almost with contempt for others, to which (sometimes) some people donate their availability to show how others lack it, and (they) are the ones who have something they want to give.

Unfortunately, this happens very often, and the relationship is characterized by a false aura of generosity, but in this relationship there is only a great disparity.
There are those who give and those who receive, but only in a sense.

The generous heart, on the other hand, can see and appreciate, cherish and love all qualities, so it shares its qualities and considers them equal.
Generosity appreciates both and puts them on the same level.

But to experience this kind of contact, one must be fortunate enough to meet a person who is on the same level of vibration and emotional sensitivity.
Only someone who possesses these rare qualities is able to appreciate, not envy, all of your qualities, to love them, and to show their own in return.

Only this kind of person is able to love from the heart.
When this happens, both grow and feel enriched.

But looking at modern times, I think such a way of relating is deeply outdated and perhaps meaningless.