1 result for (book:tes2 AND session:83 AND stemmed:he)
[... 4 paragraphs ...]
(Before tonight’s session I mentioned to Jane that I hoped Seth would discuss the August 12-15 date he gave for Miss Callahan, and would mention Bill’s report on his predictions. Jane had no idea of the subject matter for the session, although she expected the session to be short. She began dictating on time, in a normal voice and at a regular rate. Her pacing was rather slow, her eyes dark as usual. Her cold was much better, incidentally.)
[... 17 paragraphs ...]
I saw it. He should have seen it from that viewpoint. He may not remember. The bar did refer to the bar a few blocks away with a large keg in it, rather than any other bar, many of which were decorated with small kegs.
[... 8 paragraphs ...]
I was concerned somewhat with Ruburt’s reading of Jung, simply because while he seems to offer more than Freud, in some aspects he has attempted much, and his distortions are fairly important, in that seeming to delve further and offering many significant results, he nevertheless causes insidious conclusions. All the more hampering because of his scope.
[... 2 paragraphs ...]
Also since you have both been reading the Cayce book, I have a few comments. Our material speaks for itself, and many of Mr. Cayce’s comments are extremely valid and should be helpful to you. He outlined, as you know, some of the dangers in undisciplined dabbling with the subconscious, and I have also hinted that certainly some could, and did, exist, which is why we have progressed slowly and surely, in a disciplined manner.
[... 10 paragraphs ...]
Commitment yes, fanatic commitment no. I certainly advocate that the body of the material be made available to the public, and indeed its purpose is to help mankind understand himself, so that he may understand the world which mirrors his inner reality.
[... 3 paragraphs ...]
Jung feared, basically, such a journey because he felt that it led only to the racial source. He feared that anyone involved in such a study would end up in the bottleneck of a first womb; but there, there is an opening-up into other realms, through which the libido also passed. Figuratively speaking, it squeezed itself through the bottleneck, and there is a lack of limitation on the other side.
Freud courageously probed into the individual topmost layers of the subconscious, and found them deeper than even he suspected. These levels are indeed filled with what may be termed life-giving and death-tempting differentiated and undifferentiated impulses acquired in the present life of an individual. But when these have been passed there are many discoveries still to be made.
[... 11 paragraphs ...]
I am certainly not a conglomeration of vaguely-defined creative aspects of Ruburt’s personality, that struggle for release. Ruburt’s own array of writings, published and unpublished, should testify that he needs no added creative outlet.
[... 1 paragraph ...]
There is no invasion of Ruburt’s mind or subconscious on my part. He allows us to communicate. My name for him is Ruburt, which happens to be a male name simply because the name is the closest translation, in your terms, for the name of the whole self or entity, of which he is now a self-conscious part.
[... 10 paragraphs ...]