3 results for (book:sdpc AND heading:introduct AND stemmed:determin)

SDPC Introduction Valerie metaphor grief hospital death

‘I went back to work on a long-overdue Seth book the next day, but don’t let my determination to carry on Jane’s work fool you. A cave has opened up inside me, and I can only trust that the wound would heal itself. I still cry for my wife several times a day, fifty-seven days after her death. From watching Jane for 504 consecutive days in the hospital, I learned that human beings have tremendous, often unsuspected reserves of strength and power, yet I still don’t understand how I can feel such pain and live.’

I first heard from my unseen correspondent, Valerie Wood, not long after Jane had died thirteen months ago. I sent her one of the cards I’d had printed, giving a few details about Jane’s death and stating my determination to carry on with our work. Valerie responded with some poetry relative to Jane’s passing, and my reactions to her death, that I interpreted at once as being very evocative of Jane and me. At the time I didn’t know what to believe about the source of the material, even while I found it reinforcing my own contacts with Jane. Were Valerie’s messages from her own subconscious? From Jane’s world view? From Jane herself?

SDPC Part Two: Chapter 10 Mark Rob furniture arrangements bookcases

[...] Mark sat there fascinated, Rob told me later, his salesman’s smile replaced by bewilderment and determination. [...]

I was determined to go ahead. [...]

[...] The tendency had always been present, but now I determined to go ahead — often by double-checking my every step. [...]

SDPC Part Two: Chapter 5 enzymes plane saucers Rob mental

[...] The mental enzymes are the same, basically, throughout the universe, but their materializations on any particular plane are determined by the properties inherent in the plane itself.

What these wires are, then, that seem to divide our planes and appear so differently in one plane than they do in another, is solidified vitality, whose camouflaging action is determined by mental enzymes. [...]