Man is born to do karma. All the problems arise when man tries to avoid karma. Man cannot avoid work. Even thinking about something is karma, so man cannot avoid doing karma. Ignorance causes evil. Ignoring something is all about not thinking in-depth about the root cause of it. Taking action or not is another matter, it is a different karma. Monitoring one's thoughts is important as it determines whether we are doing good karma or not.
In the town of Havenwood, an unusual epidemic takes over—not one of physical illness, but an outbreak of loneliness. When Lina, a fiery yet secretly tender-hearted skeptic of romance, meets Quinn, a free-spirited artist questioning the same ideas, they are forced to confront whether real connection lies beyond romantic love or if they are truly doomed to solitude. It was a crisp day in Havenwood, and the sky was brooding—dark clouds laced with impatient energy before a thunderstorm, as if even the heavens felt the town’s growing melancholy. It was not the kind of town you would expect to be cloaked in loneliness. Stone cottages lined the narrow, winding roads, and the trees had that sage-like stillness that you only see in stories and dreams. I hadn’t been here long when the problem struck me like a slap in the face: everyone was obsessed with finding The One, as if every single person was but half a person, wandering through life like a lost sock in search of its pair. How did a town ...
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