1 result for (book:tps3 AND session:779 AND stemmed:one)
[... 4 paragraphs ...]
By such a belief you so attract probabilities that you actually miss the threats that appear at one level of reality. In so doing you not only help yourself but others as well, for they perceive your safety, and look for the reasons. The sea is dangerous if you are in the middle of the ocean without a boat. If you are on a fine liner, however, with all conveniences, then the ocean becomes an enjoyable adventure.
Traveling from one shore of it to another becomes a vast learning adventure, in which both sea and sky are observed in all of their moods and nuances while you are safely ensconced all of the while. You would not help anyone by jumping off of the liner to see whether or not the ocean was in fact dangerous without a boat. Instead you would show others how to board such craft.
[... 1 paragraph ...]
The analogy is a good one, however, for you. Sometimes you feel guilty, feeling comparatively well off, while others have lesser advantages. When you do, then you pick up such threats almost as if you believed this would somehow compensate.
[... 10 paragraphs ...]
(A few notes: Jane continues to free herself of her symptoms, if too slowly for her taste. She has had some remarkable improvements over the last two weeks especially—including one during the night: She lay in bed, “swooning” in near ecstasy, for two hours or so, and is writing her own account of this experience that was clearly a profound healing one.
[... 2 paragraphs ...]