1 result for (book:ss AND session:519 AND stemmed:jane)

SS Part One: Chapter 3: Session 519, March 23, 1970 10/48 (21%) computer illusion environment intrude assumptions
– Seth Speaks: The Eternal Validity of the Soul
– © 2012 Laurel Davies-Butts
– Part One
– Chapter 3: My Work and Those Dimensions of Reality Into Which It Takes Me
– Session 519, March 23, 1970, 9:10 P.M. Monday

[... 11 paragraphs ...]

(9:34. Seth-Jane leaned forward for emphasis, gesturing, eyes dark and wide.)

[... 1 paragraph ...]

(9:42. Jane’s pace was now slowing considerably after a fast start.)

[... 3 paragraphs ...]

(9:52. Jane was out of trance almost immediately. “I feel like someone on that TV show,” she said, referring to a popular science fiction program we’d seen earlier this evening. She tried to describe an image she’d had just before Seth began speaking, while saying it couldn’t really be put into words: “I saw… a field of something like stars. An idea would be projected out there by us against this field so that it seemed to explode. Yet really the idea’s right here,” she said, nodding toward her cupped hands, which she held just below her chin.

(During break Jane got a brief but clear message from Seth: We should turn our bed back so that its head pointed north again, instead of to the west as it does now.

[... 6 paragraphs ...]

(10:17.) When I contact your reality, therefore, it is as if I were entering one of your dreams. I can be aware of myself as I dictate this book through Jane Roberts, and yet also be aware of myself in my own environment; for I send only a portion of myself here, as you perhaps send out a portion of your consciousness as you write a letter to a friend, and yet are aware of the room in which you sit. I send out much more than you do in a letter, for a portion of my consciousness is now within the entranced woman as I dictate, but the analogy is close enough.

[... 4 paragraphs ...]

(10:31. Jane was again out of trance very quickly, yet she couldn’t remember any of the material.

(Without necessarily expecting an answer this evening, I asked a question I thought Jane might want to consider if and when she wrote an introduction for this book: Could she dictate the whole book for Seth in, say, a month’s worth of daily sessions, or did she need a certain amount of day-by-day living and experience, over a period of months, perhaps, in order to be able to let the book come through?

[... 10 paragraphs ...]

(“Okay.” Our bedroom is small and it’s difficult to have the bed lined up north-south; besides, Jane can’t see out the single window then. We didn’t turn the bed as Seth suggested.)

[... 2 paragraphs ...]

(11:00 P.M. “I have funny feelings,” Jane said when she was out of trance. “I feel as though not much time has really passed since Seth started the book. But subjectively I think there’s a vast amount of information in it so far — that somehow I’m expressing an accumulated amount, or a richness, of experience. Maybe I’m looking for some crazy expression like condensed richness….”

(Jane then used the analogy of a library, without implying that she was getting the data “from a library somewhere.”)

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