1 result for (book:tes5 AND session:218 AND stemmed:present)
[... 118 paragraphs ...]
The number one time cannot contain other times but the consciousness, with help, can to some extent perceive these other times. And this perception then allows consciousness to escape some of the confinements of that one time. Our spacious present of which I have spoken contains all times, but it is not a thing apart from them, nor precisely their sum. It is ever unfolding and mobile, and changing itself.
[... 2 paragraphs ...]
(In the 44th session, Seth began a list of qualities and attributes which are included in the spacious present. To date there are eleven of these: Value climate of psychological reality; energy transformation; spontaneity; durability; creation; consciousness; capacity for infinite mobility; law of infinite changeability and transmutation; cooperation; arrival and departure, meaning physical birth and death; and quality depth, the perspective in which an idea can expand, replacing our time and space.)
[... 9 paragraphs ...]
(Seth’s statements are presented in full from each session, with the comments from Peggy and Bill just below each statement in italic type. The Gallaghers agreed on each answer, concerning the Puerto Rico material. They arrived in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on Sunday, October 17. We begin with Seth’s material on them from the 199th session for October 18,1965, at 9 PM.)
[... 201 paragraphs ...]
(As in the Puerto Rico experiments, Seth’s material is presented line by line, in regular type, with Peggy’s answers below. These answers are quotes from my notes made during the interview. Begin with Seth’s material from the 214th session for December 6,1965.)
[... 19 paragraphs ...]
([Peggy:] “Yes.” Peggy said the reporters were deluged with pamphlets every day they were present. She herself accumulated a stack of pamphlets seven inches high, weighing several pounds.)
[... 3 paragraphs ...]
(Peggy remembers one cameraman, out of several present, who carried his camera slung on a strap over his shoulder.)
[... 18 paragraphs ...]
A very smallish crowded room. I believe a cocktail party. A woman seems to be the main hostess, though a man is present with her.
(Monday night Peggy attended a cocktail party in a private home in Washington. The party was held in several small crowded rooms, plus a large room. The main hostess was a woman, Judy Carlyle, who is affiliated with the poverty program. Mrs. Carlyle’s husband was present in an unofficial capacity, and was introduced to Peggy.
[... 48 paragraphs ...]