1 result for (book:tps3 AND heading:"delet session august 11 1975" AND stemmed:valu AND stemmed:fulfil)
[... 12 paragraphs ...]
I was saying in his first episode: “Ask and you shall receive, ask halfheartedly and you shall receive in exactly that measure,” and I was looking at you exactly as I am now. Ask and you shall receive. This applies in every area of experience. When you ask you expect an answer, or at least a reply of a kind. If you ask on the one hand and then say “I do not want to know” on the other, the results will be minimal. Ruburt was asking for flexibility but he did not fully want it, and so halfhearted questions bring halfhearted answers. Lately he asked wholeheartedly, and there will be a wholehearted answer and reply—from the psyche itself, which understands its parts. There is a wisdom and an understanding operating, a beautiful give-and-take in life between the intensity of a desire and its fulfillment—an underlying exquisite sanity. While symptoms of any kind serve a purpose they are considered legitimate. The psyche will not remove them until the intensity of desire for freedom rises high enough to meet those purposes in other ways.
(Long pause at 9:52.) It might seem in the short run that drugs and medicines are a great value—and they can indeed be extremely helpful. Money applied liberally, however, to a poverty-stricken group of people can increase their problems if the basic social and individual causes are not resolved. The poverty “rightly or wrongly” has been chosen for a reason. Ruburt’s early poverty was rich. Now I am not advocating poverty per se, but you must look at all such matters with a different kind of vision.
[... 8 paragraphs ...]