Because I Love continues a philosophical exploration of consciousness by turning toward faith, love, and inner transformation as lived, embodied processes rather than abstract beliefs. The book presents faith not as doctrine, but as a dynamic movement through which the human being forms, reorganizes, and integrates itself within the structure of reality.
At the heart of the work lies the idea of faith as an enveloping movement — a process that unites the organism, consciousness, and the coordinate plane of experience. Through a language shaped by movement, breath, warmth, and the gesture of the maternal hand, the book develops a model of inner maturation grounded in embodied perception.
Special attention is given to key thresholds of development, particularly the ages of 21 and 38, where the nervous system and consciousness undergo decisive reorganization. These moments mark transitions toward greater unity, in which perception shifts from fragmentation to integration. Within this process, love emerges not as emotion alone, but as a structuring force that enables transformation.
Exploring the tension between fear and creative redirection, between planar perception and expanded awareness, Because I Love argues that genuine transformation cannot be imposed externally. Instead, it arises as a natural movement of the organism — through self-forgiveness, compassion, and the capacity to reorient oneself from within.
Situated at the intersection of philosophy, spiritual anthropology, and the theory of art, the book presents love as an ontological force: a movement that restores integrity, transforms crisis into creation, and reveals faith as the embodied power of becoming.