1 result for (book:tes9 AND session:493 AND stemmed:impress)
[... 1 paragraph ...]
(The session began with Jane giving impressions on her own while in a light trance state. Seth spoke later.
(Jane has her own records of the preliminary data. Shortly after 8 PM, as she was writing poetry after supper, she began to get impressions that made her quite uneasy eventually. They were difficult to put into words, but involved an accident, she thought, and a hospital emergency room.
(She also had impressions of Bill Gallagher, and a man named Tom whom she could not pinpoint further. She finally became so uneasy that she called the Gallagher residence. There was no answer nor was there any answer when she called again shortly before 9 PM.
(Since session time was near, Jane asked aloud that Seth interpret the subjective data she had been receiving. She wanted a clear and concise interpretation devoid of emotion, feeling there was little use in acting whatever the impressions said; she thought more objective data could be obtained through Seth. Therefore we sat for the regularly scheduled session at 9 PM as usual.
(However, Jane began to give impressions on her own rather than through Seth. These came as she wished however, quite calmly and objectively, and it was easy for me to make notes.
(The whole time she gave impressions on her own, Jane sat quietly in her rocker, hands folded in her lap, eyes closed, voice quiet. She used many pauses, few of them long however.
[... 23 paragraphs ...]
(“The impression that Bill just has a shirt on, and Peg a jacket or outer garment.”
[... 14 paragraphs ...]
Therefore the probability is already altered. Whether or not our Jesuit even knew of Ruburt’s impressions, that probability was altered. Knowing the impressions alters the probability further, and taking the steps that I have given still further changes the probabilities. So the information should in no way be treated as negative suggestion.
Other elements have also changed. Our cat lover’s knowledge of the impressions has the same effect as the Jesuit’s knowledge.
[... 6 paragraphs ...]
Our Jesuit would want to hurt himself, and become therefore the victim in such an accident, or be the victim of some kind of one-man affair. The boys would want to hurt others. Unnumbered elements can still intrude to change their probability, even now, however; but the probabilities when Ruburt perceived the impressions were that the event would occur. For the reasons given this is now far less a probable event.
[... 3 paragraphs ...]
Ruburt’s impressions were therefore correct.
[... 3 paragraphs ...]