Results 1 to 20 of 42 for stemmed:bett
([Joel to Bette:] “Do you have any feelings of what you were doing there? Why would you go where you didn’t belong. You knew you didn’t belong there the minute you saw the place.”
([Bette:] “I didn’t know I didn’t belong there and I didn’t really care about the Indians. All I cared about was my own.”
([Bette:] “Right. I just didn’t care as long as there was...”
([Bette:] “That’s right.”
[...] Bette said that some members got more information than others did.)
(To Bette) Now I do not play favorites and you know that very well and when you need help you get it and when others need help they get it. [...]
([Bette:] “Yes, but I think I was set up for that. [...]
([Bette:] “No, I don’t want a medal. [...]
([Bette:] “Could we call this language a telepathic language because we are so used to sounds and physical things around us that we have to have a vehicle to connect us to other things?”)
([Bette:] “And this language, if we...”)
([Bette:] “I have a question that doesn’t tie in with this. [...]
[...] I think in that simple drama that went on between Bette and Joel, see, there’s all kinds of answers that we haven’t even begun to reach yet. [...] A fantastic strength and energy in Bette over there, and in Joel. [...]
([Bette Zahorian:] “And I just sat here for five minutes telling you to put that goddamn pen down, that he’s been banging away, and he finally did it.”
([Bette:] “If you kept it up, I was just going to forget the thought and then get up and grab it.”
([Bette:] “I want to say one little thing. [...]
(To Bette) Now there is some information that you are afraid of, our dear cousin of Richelieu, and the charge is on your end only and it is harmless. [...]
([Bette:]) “Thank you, Seth.”
(To Bette) Now we will not proceed with you any further unless you are willing, so rest assured. [...]
(After break Bette asked why Phil was on trial. [...]
[...] Both Jane and I think this applies to Betts, Doug’s mother. Betts took us for a ride Sunday in Sayre. When we drove past a house with a swimming pool Betts remarked that she was too old for such things. Jane and I thought this was unwitting negative suggestion, since Betts at 44 is 3 years younger than I am.
[...] Doug’s parents, Loren and Betts, have strong musical interests. [...] Neither Loren or Betts own any instruments except for a piano, which they both major in. Betts is choir director for her church. [...]
[...] As stated Jane and I visited my parents at their home last Sunday, April 3, and while there met my brother Loren, his wife Betts, and their son Douglas, who is 14. [...] Doug, who helped me author the object, is not musical; however both his parents are professional musicians; both are teachers; Betts teaching music as well as other subjects. [...]
[...] While in trance, she said, she had strong thoughts of Loren and Betts and the pictures, although she had no images. [...]
(Loren and Betts visited me from about 10:30 AM until 11:45. We had a very pleasant time, and Betts brought a jar of jam and some salad for Jane. [...] I said what I thought in a mild way, but I could tell that often they didn’t really understand what I was saying—though at times Betts surprised me a little by agreeing with me. [...]
(Gert asked Bette about her feelings toward Jason. Bette explained that while she never read very much history, Jason seemed to know a lot about it.)
(To Bette during break.) You know what I said, and you know that you know. [...]
(After break, Bette described her feelings about her friend Jason.)
(To Bette.) So do not turn aside from that endeavor, and again do not judge the information that you get in the terms in which you are used to judging it. [...]
(After break, to Bette.) Now for a cousin of Richelieu in the 18th-century France you put up some struggle pretending that you do not understand what you like to think of as intellectual discussions, and you make a great fight against what you like to think of as verbalization, and you pretend to yourself that you do not understand what I am saying when I am saying it. [...]
Those who need verbal messages most, and I am closing my eyes so no one will be offended, those of you who need verbal messages most, are those who have the greatest doubts about their own inner reality and experiences, (to Bette) but beyond that you distrust anyone who seems to have had a better education in this life than your own, and it is discrimination. [...]
(After break, to Bette.) Marseilles ...Marseilles, which was a small town in which the early life was spent. [...]
([Bette:] “Seth, what was a dandy?”)
([Bette:] “This doesn’t follow along with what you have been saying, but you have given some people what you call their whole name, like Jane is Ruburt and Rob is Joseph, what is my whole name?”)
(To Bette.) And for our friend over here, Richelieu’s cousin, neither are you supposed to know what each word of Sumari language means. [...]
([Bette:] “You just said something about ancient. [...]
([Bette:] “Now when you talk about ancient tonight are you talking about before consciousness, like the physical reality that we are now? [...]
(Bette remarked she gets more confused every week.)
(To Bette and Joel.) In other words, your experience and your experience as encountered in class in a reincarnational framework did indeed, and does indeed, and will indeed, in certain terms exist. [...]
(To Bette.) You are doing this to some extent with your reincarnational dramas, and when you do this you see you are bringing others up to date, in those terms, also. [...]
(To Bette.) Our friend over here who insists on relating, not from the Richelieu experience but from another, did a very good job of realizing that the energy originates not from this form but from each of you. [...]