Someday I'll stop trying and I'll know how much time I've wasted always wanting more I doubt you'll end up where you need to be with me I tend to run in circles, wallowing in my own sea I can run and play and dive into the ocean I can touch the sand and feel it slip away
you could follow me, I don't know where I'm going, you could follow me You could follow me, it might not be the smartest thing to do but you could follow me...
I want you to be happier than me I'm a poor example of a carefree human being Here's a list of thing I wish to be your pillow and your blanket and your life time guarantee I can love you all the way across the ocean And I doubt that that will ever go away
you could follow me, I don't know where I'm going, you could follow me You could follow me, it might not be the smartest thing to do but you could follow me...
If I ever stop believing there's a reason for my life, I might as well stop trying to make sense of what is right, you could follow me...
but you Should follow me
_________________________
"Here in this moment called NOW ...life is dancing. Come reside in that place called the moment" Prem Rawat
Some songs become super-classics and are recorded in dozens of languages around the whole world.
One of those is It Hurts to Say Goodbye.
Originally composed by Arnold Goland (music) and Jacob Gold (lyrics), it was recorded first by Margaret Whiting in 1966. Vera Lynn made it famous the next year:
Later on, many other versions appeared: Was mach ich ohne dich ("What do I do Without You?" the German version); Il Pretesto ("The excuse," the Italian version); and the most famous of all: Comment te dire adieu? ("How to Say Goodbye?" the French version).
This last was interpreted by Françoise Hardy, with arrangements by the great Serge Gainsbourg, in 1968:
Finally, Gainsbourg released a great instrumental version that same year, that became a jingle in TV:
_________________________ This a spiritual thing and I am the laughing Buddha sitting on top of the world. Donnalee.
"Populace above, populace below! What are 'poor' and 'rich' at present! That distinction did I unlearn,—then did I flee away further and ever further, until I came to those kine." --Thus Spake Zarathustra / Friedrich Nietzsche.