General provisions:
A – Whereas the saying “all is fair in love and war” is absolutely correct;
B – Whereas for war we have the Geneva Convention, approved on 22
August 1864, which provides for those wounded in the battle field, but
until now no convention has been signed concerning those wounded in
love, who are far greater in number;
It is hereby decreed that:
Article
1 – All lovers, of any sex, are alerted that love, besides being a
blessing, is also something extremely dangerous, unpredictable and
capable of causing serious damage. Consequently, anyone planning to love
should be aware that they are exposing their body and soul to various
types of wounds, and that they shall not be able to blame their partner
at any moment, since the risk is the same for both.
Article 2 – Once struck by a stray arrow fired from Cupid’s bow, they should immediately ask the archer to shoot the same arrow in the opposite direction, so as not to be afflicted by the wound known as “unrequited love”. Should Cupid refuse to perform such a gesture, the Convention now being promulgated demands that the wounded partner remove the arrow from his/her heart and throw it in the garbage. In order to guarantee this, those concerned should avoid telephone calls, messages over the Internet, sending flowers that are always returned, or each and every means of seduction, since these may yield results in the short run but always end up wrong after a while. The Convention decrees that the wounded person should immediately seek the company of other people and try to control the obsessive thought: “this person is worth fighting for”.
Article 2 – Once struck by a stray arrow fired from Cupid’s bow, they should immediately ask the archer to shoot the same arrow in the opposite direction, so as not to be afflicted by the wound known as “unrequited love”. Should Cupid refuse to perform such a gesture, the Convention now being promulgated demands that the wounded partner remove the arrow from his/her heart and throw it in the garbage. In order to guarantee this, those concerned should avoid telephone calls, messages over the Internet, sending flowers that are always returned, or each and every means of seduction, since these may yield results in the short run but always end up wrong after a while. The Convention decrees that the wounded person should immediately seek the company of other people and try to control the obsessive thought: “this person is worth fighting for”.
Article 3 – If the wound is caused by third
parties, in other words if the loved one has become interested in
someone not in the script previously drafted, vengeance is expressly
forbidden. In this case, it is allowed to use tears until the eyes dry
up, to punch walls or pillows, to insult the ex-partner in conversations
with friends, to allege his/her complete lack of taste, but without
offending their honor. The Convention determines that the rule contained
in Article 2 be applied: seek the company of other persons, preferably
in places different from those frequented by the other party.
Article 4 – In the case of light wounds, herein classified as small
treacheries, fulminating passions that are short-lived, passing sexual
disinterest, the medicine called Pardon should be applied generously and
quickly. Once this medicine has been applied, one should never
reconsider one's decision, not even once, and the theme must be
completely forgotten and never used as an argument in a fight or in a
moment of hatred.
Article 5 – In all definitive
wounds, also known as “breaking up”, the only medicine capable of having
an effect is called Time. It is no use seeking consolation from
fortune-tellers (who always say that the lost lover will return),
romantic books (which always have a happy ending), soap-operas on the
television or other such things. One should suffer intensely, completely
avoiding drugs, tranquilizers and praying to saints. Alcohol is only
tolerated if kept to a maximum of two glasses of wine a day.
Final determination: Those wounded in love, unlike those wounded in
armed conflict, are neither victims nor torturers. They chose something
that is part of life, and so they have to accept both the agony and the
ecstasy of their choice.
And those who have never been wounded in love will never be able to say: “I have lived”. Because they haven’t.
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