Jewelry wants someone who
sees her every day,
admires her,
values her deeply,
and quietly hopes to have her one day.
Her beauty is her power and as long as she’s not owned, that beauty shines freely.
But once she’s owned, she’s no longer shining. She’s possessed, not admired.
She doesn’t want someone who demands to own her right now.
Jewelry doesn’t want an owner who rushes.
Jewelry wants to make the buyer fall in love first.
Not once,
but daily,
not a year,
but many years.
Then be taken home.
That way the habit of loving has been formed.
Because jewelry knows a buyer who rushes today will rush into another shop tomorrow. He’s not a true lover, just a seeker.
The real buyer doesn’t embarrass himself by rushing, he proves his love by waiting, by valuing both her and himself.
A true lover waits.
A true lover respects.
A true lover lets the time propose what is next.

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