Results 701 to 720 of 1869 for stemmed:all
All of this does not have to be done at once however, and all in all enough shall be done.
His confidence will then be maintained through the averages of our successes, which all in all will be quite good. [...]
[...] Such medical examinations as you have in mind would be excellent from several standpoints, and we shall have further suggestions on all these lines.
[...] Anything that you learn is to your benefit along these lines, and will serve us all well. [...]
[...] Nor did we want to wait for science or psychology to explain dreams, since here we were having them all of the time. All of the material referred to in these notes, then, came together and furnished a foundation for the session to follow.)
All in all, millions of people are involved, who will be affected of course to one extent or another.
[...] An extra copy of this dream is attached to my own notebook that I’m letting grow all by itself into ideas that may be used in a work of my own, similar to Seth’s original suggestion forThrough My Eyes.
(Consider all of Jane’s material so far as the first paragraph of her material.)
[...] For as you know, you do not perceive all aspects of action by any means, and it can indeed to some extent be up to you to choose those aspects of action with which you will be concerned, and those which you would ignore.
[...] However, to all intents and purposes it changes action in so far as you are concerned with it. [...]
[...] However what you call suggestion, left alone, is a part of the inner impetus of action, which is translated in all areas of consciousness outward.
What you choose to call suggestion operates unceasingly within all aspects of action.
[...] So all in all he was not working at his best, and it can hardly be expected that he do so constantly.
For training is necessary as with all things, and although Ruburt has excellent abilities he needs also, shall we say, such direct laboratory experience.
We certainly would not want all of our sessions to be witnessed by any means, so you have no fear in that direction. [...]
[...] You also thought that you would enjoy having your husband around all of the time. Because of previous conflicts, that can be resolved, you did not enjoy having him around all of the time as you supposed that you did. [...]
[...] First of all, let us deal with some causes.
You need, first of all, to develop some of your abilities in a purposeful manner. [...]
It turns out that the officer took Fred to the Rescue Mission, rather than the Salvation Army (they may be connected, for all we know). [...] So as I wondered about the day it all happened, Fred was turned loose in town, and might have indeed turned up at our door. [...]
[...] Like me, he didn’t believe that Fred flew here from Denver—that is, talking a stewardess into giving him free transportation all that way—yet Fred got here somehow, and I explained that the manuscript of Fred’s that I’ve looked over contains descriptions of his landing in Pittsburgh, PA, and working his way east through a series of stops at restaurants, in which he’d add to his manuscript each time. [...]
When Seth took over, his confidence knocked all other ideas or doubts from my mind. Yet my eyes were open all the while. [...]
[...] I’ve also known incidents since, when groups of highly suggestible people with little critical sense have gathered in dark rooms expecting all kinds of apparitions—and nothing happened at all.
[...] The white crept up Jane’s arm to the sweater, and bled down her fingers, until all semblance of shadow was gone from the arm and palm. [...]
[...] After all, that’s a normal enough reaction—usually when you look into a mirror, it gives a faithful reproduction, and no woman is going to be pleased to see a weird-looking apparition staring back.
Above all, the fears could not be discussed with you, particularly if they seemed trivial. [...]
[...] I was very anxious that we get all the help we could.
All of the sessions Ruburt has on his clipboard are important, and discuss different aspects that are pertinent. [...]
(Also, I took exception to some statements made in the session this evening particularly that we concentrated too much upon the physical problems—granted that we created the problems, I could not understand how we were not supposed to pay any attention to the difficulties Jane had walking, etc, There was much more, and it’s not necessary to detail it all here.
[...] Jane really likes it, since it conveys very well the feeling of her little story “for readers of all ages.”
(9:28.) A small note — for this will be a brief session — to add to your material on disease: All biological organisms know that physical life depends upon a constant transformation of consciousness and form. [...]
[...] But all such instances escape you because you think of so-called evolution as finished.
[...] In the entire natural scheme, and at all levels — even social or economic ones — disease always has its own creative basis. [...]
Seth as you know him will not be reincarnated, but other portions of our entity will be born in flesh, for we have a part in all worlds and all realities. [...]
[...] We adopt whatever personality characteristics seem pertinent, for in our own reality we have a bank of complete inner selves, and we are all Seth.
[...] My memory of you includes your probable selves, and all these coordinates exist simultaneously in a point that takes up no space.
My reality includes all of this, and yet that reality which is my self constantly changes as the coordinates themselves fulfill their values. [...]
[...] It was very nicely shaped; I seemed to see it as though under a magnifying glass; all the details of its construction seemed crystal clear. [...]
There is something here we may as well consider now, having to do with the cooperation existing between all living creatures in the construction of the physical universe. [...]
[...] The bug that he saw was a different construction from the bug that was seen by either of you, and all three constructions were different from the bug’s physical construction of himself. [...]
[...] It reminded me at once of a dirge or an elegy, and I felt chills as I began to intuitively understand just how meaningful it was, even without any translation at all.
Lest I give an inaccurate picture of my wife, however, let me add that she combines instances of that seeming intransigence with a profound intuitive innocence before nature (and thus All That Is), and with a great literal acceptance of nature’s manifestations and of her own being and creations within that framework. [...]
[...] I’d finally decided that the ache wasn’t because I’d been lifting her physically—all 82 pounds of her—but because of the medical bills we’d received today. [...]
[...] Even now not all of Jane’s decubiti have fully healed, although several of them have closed up nicely.
[...] This was all behavior I still could not really comprehend.
First of all, children seek enjoyment. [...]
(Long pause.) These issues are extremely vital in cases of creativity also, although they operate in all areas. [...]
[...] He felt he should do many things, for example, that he did not really like to do at all. [...]
[...] First of all, I mentioned in our last class session that you are not tied to a neurosis from a past life, or because you set certain challenges for yourself in this life this does not mean that you cannot conquer them. [...]
Now I will let you all take a break and I give my welcome to the new people who have come to class this evening. [...]
(To Joel.) For all those who have in their deepest, most sacred thoughts imagined that to be quiet was good and to be dignified was pious, then such a performance as mine should certainly make them think. [...]
Forget body language, you will not be using it all the time you know. [...]
If such issues could all be mentally worked out on some nonphysical drawing board, again, the great challenge of physical existence would be neither necessary nor meaningful. [...]
To some extent, these are all unique and creative ponderings that on the part of the animals alone would be considered the most curious and enlightening intellectual achievements. [...]
[...] For many well-intentioned artists, with the best of intentions, produce at times shoddy works of art, all the more disappointing and deplorable to them because of the initial goodness of their intent.
It is shared by all of the other animals. [...]
[...] Each dream has meaning to all levels of the personality, and one dream object is a symbol which is translated by all layers of the self, in a mathematics which is more complicated than any dealt with by your physical computers.
You recall that all experience has an electrical reality, deposited from birth within the physical cells of the body, so that at physical death we have an electrical counterpart of the physical being with all memory and experience intact. [...]
[...] The dream fabric itself, the dream drama, is woven of many threads, and all aspects of the personality contribute some of the ingredients.
Our dreams therefore occupy the same space as is occupied by the mind—no space at all. [...]
Here we have a system of belief in which it is wrong to be white, American, or wealthy, or even at all well-off in financial terms. All of the distortions in Christianity are apparent, where the first group is blind to them, of course. [...]
[...] They may speak with seeming compassion about the plight of others, and yet all the while consider that difficulty the simple result of inferiority, of inequality.
In that chart of belief, disease, poverty, femininity to some extent, non-Christian concepts, and a non-Caucasian racial heritage, are all considered wrong to one degree or another.
[...] You may have one, two or three preferred characteristics that correlate with your ideas, for example, but your concepts about age leave you no such freedom; for at one time or another all of you, “if you are lucky” in your terms, will approach old age.
[...] And all of this before an individual is born within your system. In terms of time this is behind us all. [...]
[...] A nuclear weapon in the hands of the inhabitants of middle-age Europe would have been used almost immediately, and with nary a qualm, to wipe out all but Christendom. [...]
[...] The progression through the centuries would be far more noticeable if you knew all the facts. [...]