1 result for (book:tes8 AND session:340 AND stemmed:good AND stemmed:evil)

TES8 Session 340 May 10, 1967 11/42 (26%) headache Greek despondency chorus dragons
– The Early Sessions: Book 8 of The Seth Material
– © 2014 Laurel Davies-Butts
– Session 340 May 10, 1967 9 PM Wednesday

[... 3 paragraphs ...]

Good evening

(“Good evening, Seth.”

([Barbara:] “Good evening, Seth.”)

Good evening to our friend. Now, to our fine young lady: you must watch the pictures that you paint with your imagination, for you allow your imagination too full a reign. If you read our early material, you will see that your environment and the conditions of your life at any given time are the direct result of your own expectations. You form physical materializations of these realities within your own mind.

If you imagine dire circumstances, ill health or desperate loneliness, these will be automatically materialized, for these thoughts themselves bring forth the conditions that will give them reality in physical terms. If you would have good health, if you would have good health for the child, then you must imagine this as vividly as, in fear, you imagine the opposite.

[... 10 paragraphs ...]

(9:35 break. Jane’s eyes were open at times, her pace good.

[... 5 paragraphs ...]

These are simply examples now. If an individual sees only evil and desolation in the physical world, it is because he is obsessed with evil and desolation and projects them outward and closes his eyes to all else. If you want to know what you think of yourself, then ask yourself what you think of others, and you will find your answer.

This is, of course, on a subconscious basis. Another example only: a very industrious individual thinks the majority of mankind are lazy and good for nothing. No one would ever think of calling him lazy or good for nothing, yet this may be precisely his own subconscious picture of himself, against which he drives himself incessantly, all in an effort to prove that his erroneous self-image is, indeed, wrong. And all without realizing his basic concept of himself and without recognizing the fact that he projects it outward onto others.

True self-knowledge is indispensable for health or vitality, and this means in every instance. The recognition of the truth about the self means that you must first discover what you think about yourself subconsciously. If this is a good image, build upon it. If it is a poor one, recognize it as simply the opinion of the subconscious and not as a definite truth.

[... 9 paragraphs ...]

(“Good night, Seth.”

([Barbara:] “Good night, Seth.”

[... 3 paragraphs ...]

Similar sessions

TSM Chapter Thirteen Conz Dean illness Joan headache
NoME A note by R.F.B. overfrighten outspoken r.f.b annoying Manifesto
NoME Part Four: Chapter 10: Session 870, August 1, 1979 impulses ideal urge civilizations headache
ECS2 ESP Class Session, August 18, 1970 Sharon stacks vulnerable yourselves Arnold