1 result for (book:tes8 AND session:342 AND stemmed:mental)
[... 3 paragraphs ...]
Now: All creation is constant, and physical reality is formed and maintained in mental realms, sparked by psychic (pause) experiences. These inner events are the results of action’s own characteristics. Action continually working upon itself creates more action.
Initially this is mental action, an action-event. This action-event will then affect all other events, spiral inward and outward in all possible dimensions, and may be perceived in these dimensions in quite a different form from its original nature. In each system it can only be perceived according to the camouflage patterns inherent there.
[... 1 paragraph ...]
All of these forms, however, are you understand spontaneous and instantaneous. In the same way that an idea may appear within your system as a thought, a mental image, a dream picture or as a physical object, so does any action-event appear in many forms.
[... 2 paragraphs ...]
Such mass materializations gain tremendous emotional force, and seemingly sweep aside any conflicting actions. Great movements in history are an example here. Certain ideas also are agreed upon and held so intensely that they mold much of physical activity simply because of the strong mental and psychic energy they engender.
[... 7 paragraphs ...]
The resulting thoughts and images in turn are expressed and affect others, and not only symbolically. As you should know, mental acts have an electromagnetic reality which directly affects the inner self, which directly forms the constantly changing nature of the inner self. For the inner self is, after all, composed of mental actions, and the entity itself is everchanging.
[... 11 paragraphs ...]
When he ceases activity however, he has a tendency to activate the symptoms rather than direct his attention elsewhere. The letup of physical activity is not the issue, though he thinks it is at the end of the day. An exciting conversation, an exciting inner mental activity serves well to divert him. A series of such lapses accentuate the condition of course. Then he uses his book and suggestion to clear the air and begins again anew.
[... 5 paragraphs ...]