1 result for (book:tps3 AND heading:"delet session august 20 1977" AND stemmed:over)

TPS3 Deleted Session August 20, 1977 2/46 (4%) materialistic spray jaw glasses forecast
– The Personal Sessions: Book 3 of The Deleted Seth Material
– © 2016 Laurel Davies-Butts
– Deleted Session August 20, 1977 10:25 PM Saturday

[... 5 paragraphs ...]

(Seth considered the first two questions but not the third one; I didn’t realize this until the session was over. We were visited by Sheri, Jerry, and Roni at 8:33 PM this evening; they stayed an hour or so, hence the late start for this evening’s session. Sheri called at 8 PM, having just arrived at the Bankers’ from NYC. She wanted to tell us about class in NYC, etc. Although we wanted to see her, we found ourselves caught in the old dilemma about visitors conflicting with plans we’d already made— i.e., the session tonight. Half our problem, we saw in a discussion before the guests arrived, was that we had no planned response for such situations: we ended up feeling guilty at saying no, and resentful at saying yes. As it was, we sat for the session, with a resolve to try to do better next time. We do make progress in such affairs as visitors, expected or not expected, but could do much better.

[... 24 paragraphs ...]

Give us a moment.... The eyes naturally need contact with different kinds of light, temperature, wind, and air. They are responsive to those conditions, and react to them in a lively fashion. Contact lenses impede that responsiveness, to a greater extent than glasses. They impede the liveliness of the eyes over a period of time; the eyes’ responsiveness is connected with the ears’ responsiveness, and with balance.

[... 14 paragraphs ...]

Similar sessions

DEaVF1 Chapter 5: Session 901, February 18, 1980 optometrist lenses snake glasses waken
TPS7 Deleted Session November 7, 1982 hospital outcome disability won Kardon
TPS3 Deleted Session July 18, 1977 retreat responsiveness guests novelists popular
TPS1 Session 368 (Deleted), October 2, 1967 conscientious super spontaneous self hurry