1 result for (book:tps1 AND heading:"introduct by rob butt" AND stemmed:flexibl)
[... 13 paragraphs ...]
Jane’s symptoms consisted of a pervasive loss of flexibility—hardly noticeable at first, quite innocuous—that slowly over the years became more and more physically debilitating. Eventually she became unable to walk.
[... 108 paragraphs ...]
Often I think of the routines Jane and I settled into upon moving into 1730 in 1975. She was 46; I was 56. Now it seems that all of those years to follow passed in a flash. Routines, yes, but also ever-changing ones that still revolved around the simple elements of the work we loved and carried out amid the unexpected freedoms of living so much closer to the environment we had always taken for granted: the writing and painting, the sessions and mail, the publishing of books, the visits of friends and fans, some even from Europe. The hill house was the first property either one of us had ever owned, yet even within that loving context Jane gradually had more and more trouble walking even while the Seth material continued to grow in reach and flexibility, to attract a wider and wider audience. We saw deer in the back yard and put feed out for them and the birds. (The deer went into hiding during the hunting seasons.)
[... 32 paragraphs ...]