Results 61 to 80 of 1152 for stemmed:paus
[...] (Pause.) Energy, entities... (long pause), continually transforming massive roytans...
[...] (Pause.) An outburst of electromagnetic power, strong enough to seed a universe. [...] (Long pause.)
[...] (Pause.) Identities take many roles in many lives.
[...] There are different kinds of creativity, then, to learn, and a specialization in energy is focus and feelings that emerge; elemental energy becoming conscious of itself, and aware of issues that did not exist for it earlier; millions of molecules momentarily united with the living consciousness (pause), filled with primal energy, now learning love, and forming highly sensitive psychic patterns, electrical charges that now form emotions instead of clouds; the innocent chaos of undifferentiated personality that exists behind the highly specified and truly sophisticated mechanism of one thought. [...]
(With many pauses:) Part of the difficulty arises from the current (pause) scientifically-oriented blend of rationalism. [...] As a species, you think of yourselves (pause) as the “pinnacle” end of an evolutionary scale, as if all other entities from the first cell onward somehow existed in a steady line of progression, culminating with animals, and finally with man the reasoning animal. [...]
In most cases children grow up, of course (pause), although in the vast overall picture of nature (pause) a goodly proportion of individuals do indeed take other courses. [...]
[...] (Long pause.) At each moment, from the most microscopic levels the body (pause) in one way or another is ascertaining a constant picture of its position within physical reality. [...]
(Long pause.) I cannot stress the fact of Ruburt’s attitude toward the medical profession during and immediately following his hospital stay. [...] (Long pause.) To some extent Peggy (the nurse) stands for the medical establishment, of course. (Long pause, head down.) Read that last small group of sessions together, so that the material, both verbal and otherwise, stays with you—and again, you will be feeling the additional reassurance and confidence that comes from your individual and joint triumph, when such episodes are conquered. [...]
(Long pause, head down. [...]
(Long pause.) We are speaking of energy, of course. [...]
(Long pause at 8:38.) Now rest for a moment. [...]
[...] (Pause.) The emergence of action within a time scheme is actually one of the most important developments connected with the beginning of your world.
[...] In experience or existence outside of time (pause), there is no necessity to make certain kinds of judgments. [...]
(Jane paused, eyes closed, often seeming to grope for words while in trance.) This is, again, difficult to explain, but free will operates in all units of consciousness, regardless of their degree—but (whispering) it operates within the framework of that degree. [...]
(Long pause.) You can only make so many conscious decisions, or you would be swamped and caught in a constant dilemma of decision making. [...]
[...] (Long pause.) Non-time is psychological experience, psychological reality, and time is always at its service. (Long pause.) Entities then form the time in which they seem to dwell. (Long pause.) Experience itself is always plastic, and again, form is not dependent upon mass. [...]
(Jane began at a rather slow pace; eyes open, pauses as usual, etc.)
[...] (Long pause.)
[...] (Pause.)
[...] (One minute pause, eyes closed.) The girl’s emotional condition the other evening acted indeed like a psychological bridge, over which Ruburt could pass. [...] (Long pause.) In other words, if you will forgive a pun, you can never be consciously aware of the basic inner perception, but you can follow backward to that point. [...]
(Jane began speaking in trance while sitting down, in an average voice with pauses. [...]
[...] (Long pause.) They contain a kind of depth, having nothing to do with space, an existence dependent upon, again, intensity rather than duration. [...]
[...] (Long pause.) With training and experience a neutralizing element will be developed that protects Ruburt against the full emotional charge that he experienced the other evening. [...]
[...] (Pause.) Neither of you were taught to trust creative abilities, much less psychic ones. (Pause.)In a fashion (underlined), Ruburt thought of his abilities as fascinating but untrustworthy allies: give them an inch and they will take a yard. [...]
[...] In a way (underlined), you were too contemplative (pause), even perhaps too intellectually inclined, perhaps even too solitary, to be an artist alone. [...]
(Pause.) You could not treat your paintings as products in the marketplace. [...]
(Long pause at 9:48, one of many.) It almost dissolves in the imagined light of super-expected performance. [...] (A one-minute pause.) We want to speak more of reactions between elements of the personality, so I do not want you to settle upon one portion as the villain. [...]
(A one-minute pause at 10:11.) You have always been do-it-yourselfers, so your strengths and weaknesses become quite noticeable. (Long pause.) Who can say when determination ends up in stubbornness? [...]
(Long pause at 10:18.) Ruburt felt that fears were beneath him—or should be beneath him. [...] (Long pause.) It always tries to right itself, but it must also work within the effective overall pattern of beliefs and expectations. [...]
(Long pause at 8:15.) With some people (long pause), such bindings are so secure that in one way or another they provide an overall, fairly permanent inner and outer framework. [...] (Long pause.) They still enjoy—relatively—a good deal of freedom, however, of a sideways extension, so to speak, or in a horizontal manner, as excellent athletes, perhaps. [...] The bonding to cultural beliefs of religion (long pause) was very strong to make up for that initial lack. [...]
(A one-minute pause at 8:38. Jane had been speaking quite emphatically between long pauses. [...]
Now Ruburt had only one parent available most of the time (long pause), and he did not feel secure in that relationship—a situation chosen ahead of time, now. [...]
In any case the “troublesome” material remained (long pause), relatively inactive more or less—unless and until certain situations arose, unless and until his curiosity and ability led him to actively challenge those ideas while also in a situation where the natural fear of abandonment might be implied or suggested. [...]
[...] (Pause.) I am not clear here—there is something to do with bread. [...] (Pause.) Raisin bread should be added to the diet, and rye. [...] (Long pause.)
[...] (Pause.) There still seems to be some chemical reaction to metal (Jane paused, eyes closed, then shook her head in puzzlement), an acid connection here. [...]
[...] (Pause.) A relative from this life, I think. (Long pause, eyes closed.)
[...] (Pause; one of many.) There seems to be some other important event that will intervene or happen first. [...]
[...] Pause.) There is no basic contradiction between the man’s ideas and those orthodox ones followed by his wife. [...]
[...] Her manner had been concerned and careful, with many pauses and searching for the right words.
The world in those terms (pause) is as much the result of unpredictable behavior, unforeseen events, unexpected benefits, unforeseeable conditions, as it is the result of predictable actions, usual cause-and-effect phenomena (pause), and a close inspection of public and private life would show quite clearly that both are magnificently touched by significant coincidences. [...]
(Long pause.) Both religion and science see the self as primarily heir to flaws, decay. [...]
(Long pause at 8:53.) When it seems that left alone Ruburt’s condition will only worsen, you are following those old patterns of conditioned thought, projecting negative situations into the future, imagining the unfortunate outcome or outcomes, and acting as if you operated within a closed system. [...]
(Pause at 9:10.) Many of Ruburt’s beliefs have changed, but the core belief in the Sinful Self has been very stubborn. [...]
[...] (One minute pause.) And toward your hand. [...] Another one minute pause.) And now toward the whole physical image.
[...] the left shoulder particularly. (Pause.) Now the right foot; and now both knees. (Pause.) Now toward the fingers, and the arms in general.
[...] A one minute pause, eyes closed.)
[...] (One minute pause.)
(Long pause at 9:45.) There are as many frontiers as there ever were, and there is no catastrophe that will annihilate consciousness, or put an end to earthly life. [...] (Long pause.) There are great pulsations, however, in existence — pulsations that have nothing to do with time as you understand it, but with intensities.
Now: Ruburt’s skill is as ancient as man is, and indeed all of your arts, sciences, and cultural achievements are the offshoots of (pause) spontaneous mental and biological processes.
(Pause, one of many.) I choose my words quite carefully at times, because I realize the various interpretations that can be placed upon them. [...]
[...] (Pause.) All of your reasoned activities — your governments, societies, arts, religions and sciences — are the physical realization, of course, of inner capacities, capacities that are inherent in man’s structure. [...]