1 result for (book:wth AND heading:"part one chapter 1 januari 13 1984" AND stemmed:event)
(Jane looked at herself in the mirror today after lunch — the second day in a row that she’s done so. These events are the first like them in well over a year, she estimated. They also had their humorous side, since today she barely looked at her image, then afterward told me that her hair was white. It isn’t, of course. “Well, I got that over with,” she said with obvious relief after I’d handed her the mirror not long after getting to 330. I gave her her lipstick also, which she applied without trouble.
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Your own focus is so precisely and finely tuned that despite all of that activity, objects appear solid. Period. Now objects are also events, and perhaps that is the easiest way to understand them. They are highly dependent upon your own subjective focus. Let that focus falter for a briefest amount of time, and the whole house of cards would come tumbling down, so to speak.
Remember that you are also objects, and also events, and as physical bodies your organs are also composed of atoms and molecules whose motion, again, is directed by the electrons.
(Long pause at 3:52.) The electrons themselves have their own subjective lives. They are also subjective events, therefore, so there is always a correlation between those electrons in your bodies and those in the objects you see about you. Nevertheless again, subjective continuity itself never falters, in that it is always a part of the world that it perceives, so that you and the world create each other, in these terms.
When you change the past from each point of the latest-present, you are also changing events at the most microscopic levels. Your intent has also an electronic reality, therefore. It is almost as if your thoughts punched the keys of some massive computer, for your thoughts do indeed have a force. New sentence: Even as sentences are composed of words, there is no end to the number of sentences that can be spoken — so “time” is composed of an endless variety of electronic languages that can “speak” a million worlds instead of words.
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