1 result for (book:tps7 AND heading:"delet session decemb 3 1983" AND stemmed:but)
[... 2 paragraphs ...]
(As we got ready for lunch I told Jane that this morning I’d awakened stewing again—about Jane, but mostly about the long delays involved in getting the Blue Cross—major medical insurance benefits straightened out. I’d tried to counter the worries while working this morning, and had succeeded at times, but the concerns bugged me; each day I look for word in the mail, but it never comes. I told Jane that we may never hear from Blue Cross, since they’ve already turned down the claim once because the hospital was late in sending them her medical records. There have been other instances of bungling, too, not necessary to describe here. But I did go over the whole story with Jane to some extent, so she’d know what I was concerned about. I wanted Seth to comment if she had a session today.
[... 9 paragraphs ...]
The insurance affair will be settled to your satisfaction, as I see the probabilities thus far. The delay is due to bureaucratic slipshod work—but again, it will be settled to your satisfaction.
[... 7 paragraphs ...]
I may or may not return. Again according to those rhythms of which I speak—but know that I am present nevertheless.
[... 1 paragraph ...]
(4:35 PM. I suggested reading some of the first sessions in the new group to Jane, before I turned her, and did so. We heard Christine, the 90-year-old Russian lady, calling out as she had yesterday. I thought she sounded farther away, as though the staff had moved her, but when I left tonight I saw her in the room next door to 330 as usual.
[... 1 paragraph ...]
(I told Jane that I came up with the idea—hardly original thinking, I said—that we never die even as physical creatures, until we reach a ripe old age in some probable reality. That even though we may die in childhood, and at successive later ages, each of us lives to old age somewhere. We shut out the early deaths from our conscious awareness as we move through probabilities. Of course, there has to be a physical cutting-off point somewhere along the line— but even then, I said, we may move into another life and begin all over in those terms.
(I told Jane, before lunch, that at times I see what Seth is talking about, what he’s really saying, quite clearly at times, and that this growing awareness in recent months has had a rather profound effect in my thinking. Every so often I do get glimpses, imperfect ones, that living is easy, that we are safe, each and every one of us, that we’re never annihilated, that mundane worries about money, insurance, jobs, and so forth are in deeper terms quite beside the point. I’m not knocking those things, but trying to put them into perspective. We pursue them for many varied reasons—but they are not the end-all or be-all by any means, as we’re so used to regarding them.
(I’m sure I said more at the time, but they don’t seem to return easily to conscious recall as I finish this session late in the evening.
[... 2 paragraphs ...]