2 results for (book:ur1 AND session:686 AND stemmed:adventur)
(Jane said that I might better ask questions only during break, at least for now. My inquiry about early man hadn’t “seriously” disturbed her; but I’d been correct in feeling that I shouldn’t have interrupted her then. She also talked about possible confusions or conflicts between Seth doing “Unknown” Reality while she was writing her own Adventures in Consciousness. She’s had no trouble, however, and is still enthusiastic about her book; she’s putting Chapter 4 into final form. Adventures is due at her publishers, Prentice-Hall, Inc., in September 1974.
He toured his (public) grade school where he attended kindergarten to third grade,3 saw the children come out for recess, and felt himself one of them — while during the entire experience he knew himself as an adult, embarked upon that adventure.
(12:19.) In the sleep state after our last session, then, he allowed his consciousness to expand enough so that it became aware of information and experience usually censored automatically through mental and neurological habit. In Adventures Ruburt uses the term “prejudiced perception” — an excellent one — that is applicable here. For you have prejudiced yourself spiritually, mentally, and physically in those terms. In the sleep state Ruburt became unprejudiced, at least to some degree, so that he encountered information that seemed alien or out of context with usual experience.
1. Much Sumari material can be found in Chapter 7 of Jane’s Adventures, and in the Appendix of her novel, The Education of Oversoul Seven.