1 result for (book:tps3 AND session:697 AND stemmed:do)
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(11:03.) Now: I have several remarks, and before I get to Ruburt I have a few for you, Joseph: there is no division in your activities daily (re a discussion Jane and I had today). What you do is all an expression of yourself and its various aspects. If you do not make artificial divisions, but see the day as your own, and know your intents, then you will find that while doing Dialogues, for example, ideas for paintings will come, and that while thinking of Larry’s (Herschaft) sketches you will also find future paintings coming to mind.
Your ideas have been limiting in that respect. You take it for granted that unless you husband your time, and divide it, what you want done will not be done in time, and so you inhibit creative ideas by your attitude. You say, consciously: “I cannot get painting ideas now because I am working on thus and so in these hours,” and so inhibit paintings. With a freer attitude, you see, the paintings would come through, practically speaking, now. That freedom would quicken your other activities, so that “Larry’s work” would be his and yours more truly, and be speedily accomplished. Do you follow me?
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You are setting the limitations on your freedom through your ideas, and this to some extent has to do with old ideas you thought you had grown out of, about deadlines. Once aware of this, you can readily alter your attitudes.
[... 13 paragraphs ...]