2 results for (book:nopr AND session:669 AND stemmed:dream)
(At break I reminded Jane that we wanted Seth to discuss her May 29 dream experience with book work, but no sooner had I done so than she began describing her dreams of last night. I’d forgotten about those for the moment.
(Last evening had also been very warm, and Jane had slept poorly: She kept waking up with data about dream landscapes being “right there” before her, and wondered if she could travel among them “like crossing fences from one backyard to the next.” At the same time she knew that all of these localities were part of a mass dream landscape. As far as she knew the material hadn’t come from Seth, Jane said, but in retrospect it seems obvious that it had been in preparation for Chapter Twenty.
(And yet, as if to puzzle us further, Seth did talk about dream material that Jane had obtained just last night. This turned out to be in connection with Chapter Twenty….
(Seth was all ready to go, Jane added now as we discussed her dream material, so the session resumed at 12:03.)
2. Seth first discussed his theory of “moment points” in a set of four sessions in April and May, 1965, in connection with reincarnation and the dream universe. In the 152nd session he stated: “The whole self of which Ruburt is a part is an extremely elastic one. The various portions of this whole self reach outward and inward with much more resilience than most. [It] surrounds many more moment points simultaneously….” Through one of these, Seth added in a very simplified explanation, he could enter within the limits of Jane’s “psychic comprehension.”
Displaying only most relevant fragments—original results reproduced too much of the copyrighted work.
The dream world operates as a creative situation in which probable acts are instantly materialized, laid out in actual or symbolic form. [...] There are other important reasons for dreaming, but here we will confine ourselves to this particular issue and to the dream landscape itself, period.
It is only because you seem to expect dream experience to be like daily life that you find so many dreams chaotic. [...] If you remember such a dream event, comma, it seems meaningless in the morning.
In the same way each of you form an overall dream world in which there is some general agreement, comma, but in which each experience is original. The dream world has its reaches as the physical one does. [...]
(For some of Seth’s earlier material on dreams, dream symbols and healing, nightmare therapy, etc., see sessions 639–41 in Chapter Ten.)
THE DREAM LANDSCAPE, THE PHYSICAL WORLD, PROBABILITIES, AND YOUR DAILY EXPERIENCE
Now: Give us a moment… (Whispering:) Chapter Twenty: “The Dream Landscape, the Physical World, Probabilities, and Your Daily Experience.”
(Long pause at 12:06.) Because you are physical creatures even your dreams must be translated through the reality of your flesh. [...]