1 result for (book:tps3 AND session:760 AND stemmed:trust)
[... 3 paragraphs ...]
He cannot fake it, so he improves in direct proportion to his growing trust of the inner self.
The period of recovery, as he has set it up, is also meant to impress upon him the fact that the kind of venture he embarked upon physically is not one to be thrown aside overnight. Each new improvement is a triumph of trust, and the reeducation is highly important, for he is constantly impressed with the fact that he will not go that way again.
The improvements, therefore, are lasting. He trusts them. An “instant” recovery would have been too easy, in that he might have reasoned in the future that such a course was after all safe: he could always snap out of it at any time.
[... 3 paragraphs ...]
The activity can result, again, in unevenness of function at times, and it is precisely here where his trust is important. Frank is correct: miracles literally are occurring in the body.
When he worries about his book, this is simply a demonstration of the still-remaining lack of trust in the motion of his own psyche. The painting, however, and the poetry, sets him into motion, releasing the trust that will then flow into his other writing. He is being restructured physically.
[... 4 paragraphs ...]