1 result for (book:tes9 AND session:500 AND (stemmed:"mind project" OR stemmed:"project mind"))
[... 3 paragraphs ...]
(1: See page 362. She verified Seth’s statements about Jim Crosson’s worries about holding an audience, etc. 2: See page 362. Betty Taylor may soon change her position, moving to Washington DC from New York City to do reporting coverage for various magazines. 3: page 362. Betty Taylor nearly did not call Jane, as Seth mentioned. It develops that another speaker, thought not available, may, or has, change[d] his mind.
[... 8 paragraphs ...]
Your subsequent behavior however does not follow his pattern at all. You are quite free for example in your relationship with our friend Aerofranz (Tam Mossman), and you were with (Gene) Bernard, and more than fair with Instream. So this pattern should not be applied in your minds and projected.
You have a tendency to project this upon each other. It will be quite natural, beginning shortly and through the years, that you become acquainted with others who are interested, generally speaking, in psychic phenomena, and with others who will become interested through you.
[... 49 paragraphs ...]
Crosson will outdo himself. He is using the invitation to prove to himself that he is sought after as a lecturer. (Long pause.)There are some family problems on his mind. His wife is anxious for him, and the engagement will give him new impetus that would carry him for several years. Without it he will deflate like a balloon; but he is up to the challenge. He will do a good job.
[... 8 paragraphs ...]
I do not mind the cat, but I do not like fleas ... The two of you will serve as bridges to the material. You will impress others through encounters, and by your very presence lead them to read it.
[... 6 paragraphs ...]
(10:42. Jane went over her dream for me during break. It was a long dream. She had it three nights ago; when she got up during the night to write it down, she found the task took an hour. It has been on her mind since then.
[... 7 paragraphs ...]
You therefore appeared with the newspapers to reassure him that tomorrow in your terms did exist. The people in the offices did of course have information concerning your lives. The affair with the screen was distorted but legitimate—the screen was his mind—objectified outward, so to speak.
[... 19 paragraphs ...]