Hilmi Yerekaban Virane Kiranlara «Newest ✮»
To "break a ruin" (virane kıranlar) is a paradox—how do you destroy what is already devastated? The "deep" meaning lies in the realization that we often spend our lives trying to fix, mourn, or control the wreckage of the past or the decay of the material world, failing to see the architecture of the spirit that remains eternal. The Reflection
But here is the secret of the deep:
is a poetic call to the soul, urging a shift in perspective from the broken external world to the untouched sanctuary within. Hilmi Yerekaban Virane Kiranlara
: Those who "break ruins" are often those obsessed with the surface. They see a wall down and think it’s the end. But the soul does not live in the walls; it lives in the space the walls used to define.
In the landscape of the heart, there are no ruins—only foundations waiting for a different kind of light. To "break a ruin" (virane kıranlar) is a
: To truly understand Yerekaban’s sentiment is to stop trying to "repair" the world with the same hands that broke it. It is to find the "Abad" (the prosperous/eternal) in the middle of the "Berbad" (the destroyed). The Post: "To Those Who Break the Ruins"
Leave the ruins to the wind. Build your home in the Unbreakable. : Those who "break ruins" are often those
Don’t be a breaker of ruins. Be the one who walks through the broken gate and realizes that the sun shines just as brightly on the rubble as it did on the palace. Your essence was never the building. Your essence is the light that remains when the building is gone.