1 result for (book:tps2 AND session:617 AND stemmed:do)
[... 7 paragraphs ...]
As you do, your behavior does change, and Ruburt there (underlined) is not projecting. You look at him on some (underlined) occasions—far less than in the past—with great impatience and disapproval, as far as his physical condition is concerned, so that he feels he would have greater dignity alone on his knees than trying to walk with you with that look in your eyes.
Now for some time he did not see that look, and you were doing very well, but you slid back just at a time when he was trying to put the advice in my book to use.
You do exaggerate the Prentice relationship negatively. There are negative aspects, but you concentrate upon them. You accuse Ruburt of never forgetting a thing that you said of a negative nature, but you hold all of Prentice’s errors in your mind, and so far refuse to concentrate upon any good in that relationship.
You are aware (underlined) of the good, but you do not concentrate upon it. You concentrate (underlined) upon the negative aspects.
[... 1 paragraph ...]
It severely limits you. You have projected it into contacts with publishers. Now do not say to me that is the way things are. Do you understand?
[... 6 paragraphs ...]
(About 4 pages of material followed this, but it was too fast to record. I considered it the best part of the session, but now do not have it to read. It is impossible for me to remember at this typing, of course. It was about spontaneity and joy, etc.—obvious things, really, which become self-evident once mentioned—and how Jane’s symptoms represent our joint negative thoughts. My parents were also discussed. The session ended at 11:20.
[... 2 paragraphs ...]