1 result for (book:tes3 AND session:147 AND stemmed:caus AND stemmed:effect)
[... 1 paragraph ...]
(Last Thursday, April 15, as we were driving about Elmira on errands, Jane mentioned to me that she missed trying psychological time. She wondered when, if ever, Seth would allow her to resume. See the 140th session. Jane then received the information, she believes from Seth, to the effect that she might soon be allowed to resume psy-time, but only for fifteen-minute periods, and during the evening when I would be home with her.
[... 10 paragraphs ...]
Also, several basic causes for this habit no longer exist in fact. I will indeed help him to some degree, but I will not do all the work for him.
[... 5 paragraphs ...]
Any action that affects the physical individual also has its reality within many other fields, and its effects and its nature are felt within them. A manuscript, or indeed any art form, contains action and sets up its own climate, either of psychological acceptance or rejection. This climate is more than the result of the materials or subject matter or nature of which the work is composed. It goes without saying that such a work actually contains a portion of focused psychic energy, which is action, and which has its effects.
The energy charge in this particular manuscript is not only very vivid, but well focused. It has already had a vivid effect on more people than you know.
[... 7 paragraphs ...]
It is most important, again, to realize that action does not move in a straight line. Action may have mass. It may not have mass in other instances. Action will never have one effect only. This is a rather important point. Whenever an action seems to have but one effect, then there is a lack in perceptive abilities.
[... 10 paragraphs ...]
I believe that now you can trust this prediction: By summer he will have broken the habit for good, and it will no longer be a worry. The various unfortunate effects that seem to be caused by smoking are not caused by the cigarettes so much, as by those psychic habits which cause a personality to seek security within such habitual patterns that become compulsive.
When the inner patterns are broken the effects cease, but the inner patterns are associated by the personality with those outer habits. Indeed, the need for the habits creates the exterior habit. This is almost a mechanistic response that is confining, and indeed detrimental to expansion.
[... 5 paragraphs ...]