1 result for (book:nopr AND session:620 AND (stemmed:"emot belief" OR stemmed:"belief emot"))

NoPR Part One: Chapter 4: Session 620, October 11, 1972 14/24 (58%) generate emotions belief judgments imagination
– The Nature of Personal Reality
– © 2011 Laurel Davies-Butts
– Part One: Where You and the World Meet
– Chapter 4: Your Imagination and Your Beliefs, and a Few Words About the Origin of Your Beliefs
– Session 620, October 11, 1972 10:00 P.M. Wednesday

Displaying only most relevant fragments—original results reproduced too much of the copyrighted work.

¶6

[...] (Pause.) Your beliefs generate emotion. It is somewhat fashionable to place feelings above conscious thoughts, the idea being that emotions are more basic and natural than conscious reasoning is. The two actually go together but your conscious thinking largely determines your emotions, and not the other way around. Your beliefs generate the appropriate emotion that is implied. [...] Your emotions do not betray you. Instead, over a period of time you have been consciously entertaining negative beliefs that then generated the strong feelings of despondency.

¶13

(Pause at 10:22.) Here the belief itself will generate the negative emotions that will, indeed, bring about a physical or emotional illness. [...] Before long physical data bears out the negative belief; negative in that it is far less desirable than a concept of health.

¶16

One belief, of course, can be dependent upon many others, each generating its own emotion and imaginative reality. The belief in illness itself depends upon a belief in human unworthiness, guilt and imperfection, for example.

¶8

You are not at the mercy of your emotions, either, for they are meant to follow the flow of your reasoning. [...] If your beliefs about existence are fearful, then the emotional reactions will be those leading to stress. [...]

¶12

Here, as in normal life, your emotions and actions follow your beliefs. [...] There is much written about the nature of healing, and there will be material in this book dealing with it, but there is also healing-in-reverse, in which case an individual loses a belief in his or her health and accepts instead the idea of personal illness.

¶9

Your imagination of course fires your emotions, and it also follows your beliefs faithfully. [...]

¶11

[...] As such it also portrays the importance of belief, for using hypnosis you “force-feed” a belief to yourself, or one given to you by another — a “hypnotist”; but you concentrate all of your attention upon the idea presented.

¶7

If emotion could be trusted above conscious reasoning then there would be little point in aware thought at all. [...]

¶10

[...] The term hypnosis merely applies to a quite normal state in which you concentrate your attention, narrowing your focus to a particular area of thought or belief.

¶14

[...] In such a case belief would also be involved: Such a person would have to believe that an unhealthy condition was the best way to serve another purpose.

Similar sessions

NoPR Part One: Chapter 4: Session 621, October 16, 1972 willpower beliefs examine imagination dissect
DEaVF2 Chapter 7: Session 914, May 7, 1980 retarded technology species values council
NoPR Part One: Chapter 4: Session 619, October 9, 1972 beliefs imagination child punishment parents
DEaVF2 Chapter 8: Session 917, May 21, 1980 imagination eccentricity disorders insane stockpile