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"Chaque jour, à la même heure, un peu plus près" 🦊

@mediwaraa
60.5K views9.4K likes1:23ENApr 4, 2026
277 words1480 characters28 sentencesReadability: Grade 4

Transcript

One of the scenes is more beautiful than literature, and the little prince and the runner. The little prince wants to play with the runner, but only here he says that he can't. He says that he can't because he is not used to it. So the little prince asks him what does it mean? And the runner responds that he is used to create lines. To create lines, he proposes a very interesting exercise. And he says that he will come every day at the same time, and you will get tired. The next day at the same time, you will get tired a little more. Don't talk to him, you don't need to talk. Because the words are often too bad to hear. And then the runner tells him something beautiful. If you come for example 4 hours of the afternoon, 3 hours, I would start to be happy. As they approach me, I would feel more and more happy. 4 hours I would get tired, and I would get tired. And I would discover the price of the happiness. But if you come anywhere, I wouldn't be ready to prepare my heart. The roots are necessary. Time, proximity, and rhythm. Not intensity, not promises. The lines are built like this, by repeating the meetings, by creating the roots and by letting the heart be prepared. Because we want deep relationships but not constant. We want trust but without presence. We want lines but without sharing. And that doesn't exist. Because M&K1 also applies that. It gives time, space, and repetition. Remember the formula of the runner. Every day, at the same time, as usual.