My Love, a more wise way would be to willingly lose an arm or a leg without any armor for the glory of amor
Turn armor Into amor
Defense into vulnerability
The sword into a rose flower
The suit of armor Into a suit of amor - a suit of love
The need to attack and defend and judge and protect oneself Into β¦.
Allow the red red rose to bloom from the center of the chest To punch through the armor you fashioned in fear and ignorance
Breastplate Ribcage
from armored heart to open amour
shedding armor, embracing amour] process of shedding armor piece by piece
unveiling the armor of the heart
Love melts away all armor.
the desire for protection and the longing for intimacy.
dual nature of armor and love, acknowledging that both can be both protective and restrictive (only pseudo love)
The cold cold, metallic armor warmth softness of amor
Love is its own sort of battlefield Life is that battlefield Where your devotion to love is tested by the appearance of an external warlike fearful and dangerous world
In sexual romantic embrace, all armor must be relinquished
βA more β¦.β βArm or β¦β
Imagery
Shiny silver suit of armor, Knight in full armor Breastplate Shield, sword
A single rose blooming from center of chess Rose-cross A rose punching through breastplate Rose with blood dripping from thorns Rose arising out of skeleton
(Use AI to generate this imagery)
"Amor" is a Latin word meaning "love," and it has roots in ancient Indo-European languages. It has cognates in many modern Romance languages, such as Spanish, Italian, French, and Portuguese, all of which retain similar meanings related to love.
On the other hand, "armor" comes from Old French "armure" or "armoirie," which ultimately derives from Latin "arma," meaning "arms" or "weapons." Over time, the term evolved to refer specifically to protective gear worn in battle.