who

1 result for (book:notp AND session:783 AND stemmed:who)

NotP Chapter 8: Session 783, July 12, 1976 2/34 (6%) hub language cordellas circular wheel
– The Nature of the Psyche: Its Human Expression
– © 2011 Laurel Davies-Butts
– Chapter 8: Dreams, Creativity, Languages, and “Cordellas”
– Session 783, July 12, 1976 9:25 P.M. Monday

[... 8 paragraphs ...]

You could not die unless you were the kind of creature who was born, nor could you have a present moment as you consider it. Your body is aware of the fact of its death at birth, and of its birth at its death, for all of its possibilities for action take place in the area between. Death is therefore as creative as birth, and as necessary for action and consciousness, in your terms.

(Pause at 9:40.) It is not quite that simple, however, for you live in the midst of multitudinous small deaths and births all of the time, that are registered by the body and the psyche. Consciously you are usually unaware of them. Logical thought, using usual definitions, deals with cause and effect, and depends upon a straight sequence of time for its framework. It builds step upon step. It is woven into your language. According to logical thought and language you may say: “I am going to a party today because I was invited last week, and said I would attend.” That makes sense. You cannot say: “I am going to a party today because I am going to meet an individual there who will be very important to my life five years from now.” That does not make sense in terms of logical thought or language, for in the last example cause and effect would exist simultaneously — or worse, the effect would exist before the cause.

[... 23 paragraphs ...]

Similar sessions

NotP Chapter 8: Session 784, July 19, 1976 cordellas alphabet sentence Chinese language
TPS2 Session 600 (Deleted Portion) December 13, 1971 cordella Alphabets language shambalina impressionism
TPS2 Session 602 January 5, 1972 cordellas sound language sh onomatopoeia
NotP Chapter 7: Session 781, June 28, 1976 language unstated God archaic tenses