I’m wondering what wearing a necklace having genuine black diamond pendant on it could seem like. Noticeable by its elegance and also beauty, this wonderfully cut shining precious stone would perhaps, turn even the meanest foe I’ve ever met during my life, into becoming my best friend.
“I desire to own one!” I told myself after reading articles through several web sites on the net. The craziest thought is that I’m desiring for that Black Orlov. Undoubtedly there’ll be others believing that I’ll become the 4th one to perish having the dreaded curse of that necklace having a black diamond pendant or one can say I’d be as lucky as Mrs. Huffman in the sequence “Desperate Housewives” has been. If only I could have a million dollars, I will obtain what are known as “Eye of Brahma”.
Then, I’d have the guts to match myself personally to Princess Nadia Vyegin-Orloff who possessed the same diamond. Such a ridiculous thought!
But looking beyond buying the world’s popular black diamond pendant will be the fortune and bad luck it has spawned and the way it had influenced the lives of so many. Pondering the idea of how it’ll change my well being or even whether there might be the chance of being the next one to wear the Black Orlov, it gave way sooner or later to the deep ideas rising in the softest portion of my heart, the ideas of just how each one of the carats of this luxurious pendant will better help the children from Somalia who are indeed struggling of hunger at their very early age.
Probably, just maybe I can offer a higher quality of life for the many Burundi citizens or hopefully to even uproot the everlasting civil war in this country. Could there even be a chance of fixing the ruined economy of Zimbabwe if I donated this priceless black diamond pendant to them?
What is the curse of Black Orlov?
I suppose we could assume that every necklace with a luxurious black diamond pendant on it has its own curse. The feeling of having much while others are empty handed. It’s the greed that could engrave the heart of anyone. It’s a curse for others to shoulder.
