1 result for (book:tps7 AND heading:"delet session octob 21 1983" AND stemmed:was)
[... 1 paragraph ...]
(Jane is off the Kefzol, the antibiotic Fred Kardon had her on after she broke her right leg. Fred took her off it this morning. He also visited her. Early this morning Georgia had noticed what she took to be a swelling over the break and the ulcer on the right knee, and suspected drainage problems. When Fred came into 330 Georgia had told Mary Ann about it, and Mary Ann pointed it out to Fred. He looked at it and said any swelling was “due to the arthritis.”
(What a comedy of errors, I told Jane. First the girls are wrong about the cause of the slight swelling, then Fred gives her a lousy suggestion about arthritis! I told Jane I hoped the whole episode served as a warning as to what hospitals were really like, and the well-meaning but misguided people who worked in them. Jane answered my question about whether Fred had any idea he was giving out rotten suggestions about arthritis by saying that it never occurred to him—or any other doctor.
[... 3 paragraphs ...]
(I told Jane that if she wanted to do anything about a session, now was the time before people started coming in to do her vitals. She went into the session, then, just as I was getting ready to start on the mail.)
[... 10 paragraphs ...]
(3:50. Lorrie came in to take Jane’s blood pressure. She gave no sign that she realized Seth was present. Jane broke off at once to speak in a conversational tone. Lorrie is the gal who, with a student nurse, broke Jane’s leg when turning her, when showing the student how to do it. Lorrie smiles and talks to us, but hurries in and out as quickly as she can. I know the episode affected her. After she left I read the last paragraph to Jane. Resume at 3:53.)
[... 1 paragraph ...]
(3:54. Dawn came in to take temperature—97.8—and pulse. “I knew Peggy was here. I met her in the elevator.” Resume at 4:00.)
[... 2 paragraphs ...]
(Then I looked up to see Jane reaching up to her left ear with her left hand—in a spontaneous gesture I haven’t seen her do in I don’t know when. It looked unnatural to see her do this. She was surprised too. It was another great sign, I told her. With her gesture Jane couldn’t quite reach the ear, which itched. She began to move on the bed, twisting her hands and wrists and rotating her arms. “But you will reach it,” I said, delighted. She tried again—and did reach the ear. She actually dug a bit of wax out of it with a forefinger. “I got it. I got it,” she exclaimed. Obviously, this was something she couldn’t even manage yesterday, let alone last week, say.
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(At 4:20 Jane was able to move both arms and shoulders to such an extent that she had me take away her ashtray and cigarette so she had more room. The left arm especially moved very freely at the shoulder. “It certainly wants to move,” she said, rotating the whole arm and hand.
(Now I mentioned the idea I’d had last night, and made a note of. It was simply that I’d bring in one of the Seth books and start reading it to her a page at a time. She liked the idea. I told her to name the book, or more than one, if she wanted. I added that as soon as she could handle pages, I could take the book apart so that she could hold each page up while she read it when she was alone. I could leave a stack of them on her bed. This would give her great freedom to read by herself at any time of the day or night. It would be very liberating, I said, truly. She agreed. I thought that the way she was improving, she’d be able to work up to such a step. Also, I could take apart any book for that matter.
(As we talked Jane’s big toes began to move at the first joint, almost in unison. They were painful when I gently touched them, but the toes moved at the first joint. Jane felt strong sensations in them like pins and needles, she said. But a little later the big toes began to bend by themselves. Then both ankles began to move—the whole foot in each case. She said the rhythmic motion was “just like that bicycle exercise I used to do, right in rhythm....” She had to stop when the tingling sensations got to be too strong even when I wasn’t touching them.
[... 3 paragraphs ...]
(4:25 PM. Interesting material, I told Jane. Seth hadn’t put it that way before. It certainly seemed to apply in her case, and may be a valuable clue. She agreed, having remembered what Seth had said while she was in trance. I interpreted the information as Seth’s way of telling us that those lagging portions of Jane’s psyche were now embarked on their journey to catching up with those other portions that were way ahead—meaning that the psychic abilities were the leaders in Jane’ case.
(4:32. Jane now said that her reference yesterday to an unexpected visitor probably referred to Peggy G’s visit today. Then I got it. Of course: Peggy had not only visited unexpectedly, but she’d brought a letter from a fan who wanted to visit us from New York City. I’d scanned the letter while Peggy was present, but hadn’t made the rather obvious connection then, nor had Jane. “It makes your prediction pan out,” I said to Jane. “It reminds me of those old envelope tests. See the correlations?” Jane did. Things work out in unexpected ways.
(At 4:45 I got ready to turn Jane on her side with the doughnut between her knees. I massaged her neck briefly first, and her left leg. The turn went very well indeed—much less painful for my wife. That made two good turns today, I said, and she agreed. After she was on her side I used Oil of Olay to massage her feet, lower legs, arms and hands, talking to all of those portions —and new movements were apparent in all areas. Wonderful. I took a nap at 5:00.)