1 result for (book:ur1 AND session:690 AND stemmed:felt)
[... 1 paragraph ...]
(Jane had “no idea at all” of the material in the last session. She tried reading my notes for it now, since I had only one page typed from them, but couldn’t decipher my homemade shorthand. She hadn’t particularly felt like having a session last night so we ran errands instead. Tonight, Jane said, she’d try letting Seth come through, although she didn’t think she was at her best. By 9:28, she sat “waiting to just get it clear.”)
[... 6 paragraphs ...]
The CU’s, forming the structure later in its entirety, form all the atoms, molecules, cells, and organs that make up your world. Land changes and alterations of species are conditions brought about in line with overall patterns that involve all species, or land and water masses, at any given “time.” There is a great organization of consciousness involved on such occasions — sometimes creative cataclysms, in which, again from its own precognitive information, nature brings about those situations best suited to its needs. Such biological precognition is firmly based in the chromosomes and genes, and reflected in the cells. As mentioned earlier (in the 684tb session), the present corporal structure of any physical body of any kind is maintained only because of the cells’ innate precognitive abilities. To the self the future, of course, is not experienced as future. It is simply one of the emerging conditions of an experienced Now (you had better capitalize that). The cells’ practically felt “Now” includes, then, what you would think of as past and future, as simple conditions of Nowness. They maintain the body’s structure in your poised time only by manipulating themselves in a rich medium of probabilities. There is a constant give-and-take of communication between the cell as you know it in present time, and the cell as it “was” in the past, or “will be.”
[... 16 paragraphs ...]
(10:55. Jane’s trance had indeed been deep, her pace usually good. Now she felt very much better. The material had been clear, she said, coming from that “certain necessary level” that she had to reach in order to do this book.
[... 26 paragraphs ...]