1 result for (book:tes4 AND session:155 AND stemmed:jane)
[... 1 paragraph ...]
(Jane has received her contract for her ESP book from Frederick Fell. For several days she has been debating over the terms it contains, liking some and not too fond of others. We have discussed it together also.
(This evening Jane checked with her pendulum technique, and learned that it would be best for her to sign the contract as it stands. Mr. Fell has already made some changes in the contract, as requested by Jane. The pendulum also advised her against a trip to New York City at this time. I asked myself the same questions with my own pendulum, and received the same answers. The upshot of all this was that by session time we had about decided to sign the contact.
(Again Jane spoke while sitting down and with her eyes closed, in a normal voice with some pauses.)
[... 8 paragraphs ...]
(Jane now took a very long pause, sitting quite still for well over a minute.)
[... 4 paragraphs ...]
(Break at 9:18. Jane was dissociated as usual for a first delivery, remembering some of the material in a general way. She resumed in the same quiet voice at 9:34.)
[... 3 paragraphs ...]
(Jane now began to cough. She had been sipping some fruit juice at break. The coughing was not violent but it became persistent. She sat with her eyes closed for a minute or two while she tried to control it.)
[... 1 paragraph ...]
(Break at 9:39. Jane had been dissociated, but toward the last realized she was coughing. Seth, she said, took a break so that she could rest. She drank some water, remarking that as far as she could remember this was the first time she had ever so interrupted a session. Without checking each session, I agree.
(Once again Jane resumed in the same quiet voice, at 10:44.)
[... 14 paragraphs ...]
(“How come the pendulum will sometimes say Jane or I made valid predictions, when we don’t see any connection consciously?”
(For many months now both Jane and I have followed a practice of making perhaps half a dozen predictions for the following day. Usually each one consists of three or four words at the most. On the day the predictions were made for, we check them against what we can consciously remember of the day’s events. It is great fun to make them, and was Jane’s idea originally.
[... 6 paragraphs ...]
(End at 10:06. Jane was very well dissociated.)