1 result for (book:tps5 AND heading:"delet session march 26 1979" AND stemmed:chang)

TPS5 Deleted Session March 26, 1979 3/38 (8%) fiction Sadat treaty Seven insights
– The Personal Sessions: Book 5 of The Deleted Seth Material
– © 2016 Laurel Davies-Butts
– Deleted Session March 26, 1979 9:49 PM Monday

[... 13 paragraphs ...]

I am not saying that you should not have regular working hours. I am saying that you should change your beliefs concerning the nature of time and creativity—and for Ruburt, time, creativity, responsibility, and work. (Pause.) If you become more aware of those issues, the time that you have, all of it, will quite literally seem to expand. Ruburt in one moment is often mulling over and mentally arranging his time. Figuring out how he will get such-and-such done an hour or two hours from then—so he foreshortens the moment, in that it becomes far less full than it is capable of being for him.

[... 6 paragraphs ...]

(10:18.) Now: Ruburt’s body is responding far more than either of you presently realize, and this is because in that regard Ruburt’s beliefs have been changing at a fast rate. Here the ideas of responsibility also have some application. He does not have a responsibility to sit constantly at his table, as if creative ideas could only find him there. This does not mean, again, that there is anything wrong with his sitting at his table five hours steadily if he wants to, but that he must loosen his beliefs about work and responsibility.

[... 9 paragraphs ...]

Particularly in the beginning, for all of your joint complaints about Prentice, Prentice was innovative. (With humor:) I believe that Sadat on television this evening said (louder) that it takes time for old ideas to change.

[... 6 paragraphs ...]

Similar sessions

TPS6 Deleted Session March 2. 1981 fiction writer novels public recognition
TPS5 Deleted Session July 12, 1979 science Greg Carson Colorado fiction
TPS2 Deleted Session January 1, 1973 Adventures Eleanor Rich writer Tam
TES9 Session 457 January 13, 1969 revelationary fiction mission hypocrisy committed