1 result for (book:tps3 AND session:691 AND stemmed:do)
[... 4 paragraphs ...]
While he worries sometimes about future money, or how he will make out, generally speaking he can handle that, and knows that left alone his creativity will, and is, producing financial as well as other results. He may worry about prices in the grocery store—and he does—but you do think in terms of financial limitations. Your daily remarks constantly speak of financial lack, except when you make a particular attempt to speak differently.
[... 2 paragraphs ...]
The more financially threatened he feels, the less free he feels to be creatively himself, and the more something like a book deadline gains in importance. You make a point, each of you, of concentrating upon your financial lacks, rather than your gains. You are not blind to your gains but you do not emphasize them.
You did very well, suggesting you eat out, and in some other areas, Joseph, and helped Ruburt several times lately in important ways. When he feels financially threatened, however, that is when he pulls in his horns, cuts down on creativity, and tries to do his “job.’’
He is afraid of overbuying at the grocery store, of wasting food. He feels guilty in your eyes if students owe him, because this does not seem practical. Then he feels unappreciated and hurt, feeling he is not doing enough, and then resentful and angry.
[... 1 paragraph ...]
The vibrator is good. It is a teaching mechanism—helping him with it is good, for it shows him that you think it is all right for him to relax and let go. That is why your conversation earlier was advantageous, because you do not often verbalize your feelings.
[... 2 paragraphs ...]