The person in misery does not need a look that judges and criticizes but a comforting presence that brings peace and hope and life and says: 'you are a human person: important, mysterious, infinitely precious, what you have to say is important because it flows from a humn person; in you there are those seeds of the infinite, those germs of love. . . of beauty which must rise from the earth of your misery so humanity be fulfilled. If you do not rise then something will be missing. . . Rise again because we all need you. . . be loved beloved. '