1 result for (book:tes1 AND session:23 AND stemmed:watch)
[... 25 paragraphs ...]
(Break at 9:35. Jane said the sentences making up this message were so long and involved that she made no effort to pay any attention to them while voicing them. This seemed strange to her because as a writer she is used to watching out for grammar, punctuation, etc.
[... 21 paragraphs ...]
(Break at 10:32. During break Jane seemed to become aware of several things at once. She said she thought she’d been in a trance of some kind almost from the beginning of the session. She had no memory of giving the above monologue; she said it was as though she had “vanished.” I told her that of course she was with me all the time, pacing so fast that at times it was distracting. The material, she said, came through with no distortion at all. She felt as though she were a pure vehicle; she had no conscious thoughts about it, she was hardly aware of her environment at all. She had a vague memory of picking up a wineglass once. Actually I had watched her smoke a couple of cigarettes while dictating, pace back and forth, pause to look out the windows, etc. She did not feel tired, nor had her voice shown any changes.
[... 22 paragraphs ...]
This is one of the reasons why breathing seems automatic, and why dreaming seems to confound your physical camouflage idea of time. It is perfectly within your present capabilities to understand that time, to your dreaming self, is very much like time to your waking inner self. But you must first disconnect the physical concept of time and watches.
[... 25 paragraphs ...]