1 result for (book:tes3 AND session:115 AND stemmed:do)
[... 9 paragraphs ...]
They appear to lack the apparent physical durability of, say, a table or a chair, the table and chair being examples of physical realities. And yet their effect is much more durable, and they impress and to some extent manipulate physical realities, in their strong and sometimes explosive emergence into your universe. Such realities do not bow to the artificial time measurements which so often limit you in daily life.
[... 4 paragraphs ...]
Just because your attention is no longer focused upon such realities, this does not mean that they do not continue to exist.
You do indeed give them energy, as they also give you energy. Dreams, or the dream universe, exists even while you wake, and you only become aware of certain portions of it even while you sleep. You do create it, but it is also to some degree independent of you. As your ego experiences changes in its relationship with the physical world, so do you change aspects of the dream world accordingly, and enrich it.
[... 2 paragraphs ...]
Dream locations do not exist like physical objects in your head. How could your small skull hold a replica of a cement building, for example, even though the skull might be a rockhead? You need not take that remark personally, Joseph. I couldn’t resist making it, however.
These dream locations are realities. They do exist, even though they do not exist in space as you know it, and certainly they do not take up space in the skull. There would be no room for anything else. As a brief byline here, I mentioned once the Crucifixion, saying that it was an actuality and a reality, although it did not take place in your time. It took place where time is not as you know it. It took place in the same sort of time in which a dream takes place, and its reality was felt undeniably by generations, and was reacted to. Not being a physical reality, it influenced the world of physical matter in a way that no purely physical reality ever could.
[... 37 paragraphs ...]