Results 81 to 100 of 1305 for stemmed:two
[...] Those who require more sleep would then take, say, a two-hour nap. For others a four-hour block sleep session and two naps would be highly beneficial. [...]
[...] However, this could be done far more effectively with two, rather than one, sleep periods of lesser duration.
Two periods of three hours apiece would be quite sufficient for most people, if the proper suggestions were given before sleep — suggestions that would insure the body’s complete recuperation. [...]
[...] The seeming great division between the waking and the sleeping self is largely a result of the division in function, the two being largely separated — a block of time being allotted to the one, and a larger block of time to the other. [...]
[...] In one place, page two of the results, nine impressions in a row were correct and highly specific, and these added up to a complete picture of the place where the Gallaghers stayed. [...]
[...] Two of these at least made the difference between hits and failures, and they are noted in the test results.
(For this evening’s envelope test I used two sales slips stemming from Christmas shopping Jane and I did. [...] I put them down between the usual two pieces of Bristol, and enclosed them in the usual sealed double envelope.
[...] In this inverted time system individual ten is aware of the experiences of individual two; and individual two is aware of the experiences of individual ten. [...]
(See the tracing of the two sales slips on page 179. The data contain references to both slips, although Seth or Jane did not identify them as such, or refer to the fact that there were two test objects, as I had hoped. [...]
[...] What was however extremely unusual was that this contact was recognized as such by two inhabitants of completely different systems.
[...] The incident represents two opposites. [...] You were objectifying, in your mind, two opposites and attempting to correlate them. [...]
[...] Also, remember your own childlike self and the two of you, when you think of your son, imagine what you were like at that age and how difficult it was to communicate to your parents. [...]
I said earlier that two things were involved and one was fear. [...]
([Rachel:] “I can’t connect the two.”)
[...] The two went on welfare. [...] The young Jane spent almost two years in a Catholic orphanage for women while her mother was hospitalized. [...] The two women’s Catholicism became even stricter: it was often bolstered by the head of the local church coming to Sunday dinner at the old two-family house at 92 Middle Avenue, in one of the lower-income sections of Saratoga Springs.
Often, I could hear a powerful Seth through two closed doors. [...] Turnover was low, and we knew most of the other tenants, although no more than one or two of them at any time had an inkling of what we were up to with first the sessions and then the addition of the ESP classes. Even now I still correspond with two of those “ex-tenants”—loyal friends indeed!
Pardon me for using the phrase every so often, but as the years passed and after her two very brief stays in Elmira’s St. Joseph’s hospital, Jane finally came to be deeply skeptical of the value of conventional medical help. [...] The connections involving her mother’s bedridden condition and her tempestuous temper, including her suicide attempts, both faked and real, troubles with a succession of housekeepers, the lack of a father, the almost two years she spent in a Catholic orphanage while Marie was hospitalized, the death of her beloved grandfather, the whole strained atmosphere within which the gifted and impressionable child was growing, as well as her conflicts with church dogma and personalities, had, all together, powerful effects indeed. [...] The first time, Marie cursed me from her bed; the next two times she ignored me.
[...] And riding her old-fashioned secondhand bicycle she also sold cutlery and household supplies door-to-door for two out-of-town manufacturers, and did well at those efforts, too! [...] Jane worked part-time as a secretary for Elmira’s Arnot Art Museum, and wrote two unpublished novels—and one that did sell. The Rebellers was published in a two-novel paperback edition that she disliked intensely. [...]
[...] Actually, then, we seek to wed the old environment with the new, using the psyche as a bridge between the two worlds. [...] We see the intimately known windows of the two apartments we shared still vacant, the blinds hanging at careless angles. [...]
[...] One result of our meeting [as I wrote at the beginning of the Introductory Notes for Volume 1], was the decision to publish this long manuscript for “Unknown” Reality in two volumes.5
[...] As you stand there, then, in this case two such projected images go out onto streets Three and Four. [...]
Dream two involves two couples, and they are both you and Ruburt.
[...] You get together, the two of you, on each issue, as it happens, and make your decision together, and stick by it. [...]
[...] You would find it hard to express pleasure with a given cover, or you would forget, as with Seven Two, for its attributes would seem lost in your larger displeasure. [...]
[...] A kindly old man appears, who says that Ruburt’s father made this contraption two hours before his death, to ensure Ruburt some inheritance.
[...] In the light of the material obtained in the two deleted sessions earlier this week, we believe this to be a significant step forward, a mark of Jane’s increasing confidence in her psychic ability, and wholehearted acceptance we believe to be necessary.
[...] In the light of the material obtained in the two regular sessions earlier this week, we believe this to be a significant step forward; a mark of Jane’s increasing confidence in her psychic ability, and wholehearted acceptance we believe to be necessary. [...]
(I’m sure my improved attitude resulted from the last two sessions—plus other recent ones—but I have resolved anew that I must simply concentrate upon my creative work each day, see Jane and help her as much as I can, and spare my body consciousness the needless stress of worrying about the future. [...]
[...] They often happen when she moves her left arm, she said—the two sort of working in tandem. [...]
[...] I’d also said I wanted to go over the last two sessions with her, plus some older ones.)
(Jane and I considered two possibilities. [...] The two buildings are no more than fifty feet apart in physical space, being directly across the street from each other.
(The object was folded as indicated, placed between two pieces of Bristol, and sealed in the usual double envelopes.
(“Can you be more specific about the two men and the woman?”)
[...] On this map he indicated the location of each house, and it developed that there were two families with two children who lived three doors from him. Of these two families John said that the name of one of them, Snyder, immediately popped into his mind as Seth gave the pertinent material. [...]
Perhaps then your universe of positive matter, and the two surrounding universes that compose so-called antimatter can best be described as two ends of a spectrum that by nature can never meet.
The local situation would have involved five people, two of which are known to you. [...]
[...] She chose him knowing this, in order to be of comfort, since in a previous existence in Austria, two men were severely treated at her recommendation. [...]
(Jane and I have been attending to the mechanics of publishing affairs more than ever since she held the 831st session two weeks ago [on January 15]. [...] I sent Psyche to Tam Mossman at Prentice-Hall on the 22nd, and on the same day we received from him the page proofs for Seven Two. We spent two days of concentrated labor studying those, and I returned them to Tam on the 24th. [...]
[...] By rights, I shouldn’t be mentioning it sequentially until I publish the two books that Jane and I had finished while she was hospitalized — then it would be all right to announce that she is dead! [...] is publishing in two volumes in the spring and fall of 1986. [...] I made no leaps in time to write about her physical death, for to me that sad event lay too far in the future — over two and a half years — from the time she finished dictating Dreams, “Evolution,” … in February 1982.
[...] Sue published her two-volume work, Conversations With Seth, in 1980-81; her father died two years later. [...] Two nights earlier, Sue had had a very strong precognitive dream concerning her mother’s death; she plans to discuss that event in the book she’s writing. [...]
(But first this note, In Appendix 19 for Volume 2 of “Unknown” Reality, I offer material from Jane and from Seth about that atonal, very distant-sounding Seth Two. I quote myself as writing that “Seth Two exists in relation to Seth in somewhat the same manner that Seth does to Jane, although that analogy shouldn’t be carried very far.”)
[...] (Jane was cremated the next day, in a process we had agreed upon several years ago.) I also worked upon two other books we collaborated upon after she had been hospitalized. [...]
(It will be remembered that during the unscheduled session on last Sunday, February 27, and during Monday’s regular session for February 28, Seth had mentioned the possibility of witnesses for last Wednesday’s session, March 2. Moreover he mentioned the possibility existed for two sets of witnesses, and for four people, perhaps even five. [...]
(Two sets of witnesses did attend tonight’s unplanned session, the Gallaghers and Marilyn and Don Wilbur. [...]
(It can be said that since the Gallaghers and the Wilburs both know of the sessions, and that they visit us regularly, an unscheduled session is hardly unusual with these two sets of witnesses. [...]
(I asked Jane to hold this session so that we could get information on two questions: 1. The sales of her books, both hardcover and paperback. [...]
[...] That is, the books will have a strong active part to play over the period of your lifetimes, rather than for example selling in the millions in a year or two, then vanishing from the scene.
[...] The two Bantam sales, for example, Material and Seth Speaks, served purposes for you and Ruburt, and Prentice as well.
There have been two main areas: the head-jaw area, held in a particular position, more or less, resulting in particular positions of the shoulders and arms. [...]