Moving Somebody's Heart

What do you usually feel when your kid utters his/her first word or draws a picture of your happy family? What does a singer feel when he receives his/her first 'flowers' of fame? What can a woman feel if she is proposed to with wonderful quotes from 'Wedding Song'? What do senior people feel when they first see their grandkids? And the answer to all these questions is stably the same – all people from previously mentioned examples feel that their hearts have been moved.

Indeed, when something moves our heart we feel on the verge of crying – crying out of happiness, the feeling that makes us sentimentally pleased with occurrences that contribute to our uniqueness and immense importance to people we have been having our heart in for a long time. Our hearts are truly moved when we get sincere evidence of the fact that people that are dear to our hearts cherish us and appreciate us and things we have done for them.

There are people whose heart is almost impossible to move – they are just too pragmatic and spiritually blocked from all this 'sentimental rubbish'. But even they are not made from iron – at least we innocently believe they are not, and express their moving emotions once in a while as well.

As opposed to iron-hearted individuals, there are people who are excessively sentimental – anything even close to touching can move their hearts. These people are very impressionable and emotional, as a rule they wear their hearts on their sleeves. The best situation is 'residing' in the golden middle – being neither excessively movable nor too unruffled.

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Why would anyone eat his/her heart out? Is it some kind of inhuman entertainment or maybe there’s more to this expression than meets the eye? Why shy men never win fair ladies’ hearts while clowns win everybody’s hearts in an easiest way?

We must learn how to take heart instead of losing it in especially important situations. This makes us stronger plus helps us achieve worthy things when walking along the roads of our lives.