Quotes From "Truly Madly Deeply" By Faraaz Kazi

1
Love never comes with a brochure of rules and regulations, a prospectus with guides of what is acceptable and what is abominable. It’s a standard to follow your heart, and that’s what I did and if doing that hurt you, then I’m sorry… sorry for coming in your life and wasting your time, for causing you an anguish so great that you could not bear the sight of me. Today, I am proud to stand up and honour myself and proclaim to the world… yes, I loved someone more than myself. I loved someone truly, madly, deeply!. Faraaz Kazi
2
If not towards his case to give him glimpses of what could be a happy future, it stayed back at least to warrant her happiness, stayed back with the pain that strangely didn’t hurt anymore. Faraaz Kazi
3
Our love is the reason romance was created. Faraaz Kazi
4
If a man cries in front of you, it doesn't mean he's weak. It means that he trusts you enough to let his guard down. Faraaz Kazi
5
Fate, they say, fate- the clay that molds the events of your life, and it was the same fate that had thrown the stone of her heart on the building of his expectations. But then wasn't it his fault that he had constructed the building of glass? Hadn't he failed to cement the bricks of his love with trust and colour them with security? There was no insurance for broken hearts, no ointment for wounded souls and there would never be one, he knew. Faraaz Kazi
6
Walking alone is not difficult but when we have walked a mile worth a thousand years with someone then coming back alone is what is difficult. Faraaz Kazi
7
I inhale loneliness like it is the sweet smell of virgin earth conquered by fiery rain drops. Within me, I'm a thousand others. Faraaz Kazi
8
He noticed that she threw away the crumbled bus ticket on the street as soon as she got down. He picked it up and put it in his pocket along with his own a memorabilia of their first date together, just like a strand of her hair he would find later on his shirt and the broken pen cap that she would go on to search in the laboratory and so many other such small things which he would collect. Faraaz Kazi
9
He took the last seat, as usual, a subtle reminder of what he was and what he had become. Faraaz Kazi
10
I eyed her like a thirsty traveler in the desert looks at a pail of water. Faraaz Kazi
11
She flooded my thoughts. I drowned in peace. Faraaz Kazi
12
That night it did not rain as much in the sky as it did in his heart. Faraaz Kazi
13
It was like watching a movie being played on the blank screen of his mind; the only difference was that he did not get bored, no matter how many times he watched it. Faraaz Kazi
14
He stopped his act to take a snapshot of that instant he would so treasure- her delightful laughter that could make him do anything, anything at all, in the world and beyond! Faraaz Kazi
15
He got up slowly, not bothering to curse himself for forgetting the stop where he had to disembark. He was not used to leaving things behind; he wondered how the bus stop escaped. Faraaz Kazi
16
I didn't know that there was a thin line between ignorance and arrogance. Faraaz Kazi
17
Silence has its own language and in that silence he found words within himself; words for her, words for him and words for them. Faraaz Kazi
18
One half of me is a hopeless romantic. The other half is well... just realistic. Faraaz Kazi
19
Her fragrance blew him off and his body followed steps he had never learnt in his life. Faraaz Kazi
20
Perhaps that is the real surprise of love; it exists, but one may not attribute causes and effects to it. The existence may appear to be a mere fallacy to the minds of some, and by the time they realise what hit them, they would already be down and dead. Faraaz Kazi
21
There is not much left to see in this world if one sees her once. Faraaz Kazi
22
Her melodious laughter sounded like the distant tinkling of soft bells and he stored the sound in her temple- his heart. Faraaz Kazi
23
Love?' he asked himself, giving no sense of recognition for that word in the dictionary of his mind. It was the only battle he had lost in life, the only thing that had been snatched away from him, before he could even claim it. Faraaz Kazi
24
The pain would not leave him. It came to him like the tide that hits the sea. Faraaz Kazi
25
A minute teaches me sixty different ways to think about you. Faraaz Kazi