Results 621 to 640 of 768 for (stemmed:inner AND stemmed:sens)
[...] It makes sense, however, not only because of the letters or vowels or syllables that are used within it, but because of all of the letters or vowels or syllables that it excludes.
More than that, however, as far as you are both personally concerned, you have a built-in sense of distance that gives the house actually an extra dimension of privacy that is not within the grounds themselves, yet adds to that aura. [...]
[...] Ruburt’s response is very healthy for him, since it involves the acceptable use of exuberant and aggressive energy, and the sense of power in the physical realm.
(9:46.) Despite all of that, men and women still find the solutions to many of their problems by rediscovering the larger sense of identity1 — a sense of identity that accepts the intuitions and the feelings, the dreams and the magic hopes as vital characteristics, not adjuncts, of personhood. [...]
I only want to show you that the sense of identity need not inevitably be coupled with the intellect exclusively. [...]
The child first explores the components of its psychological environment, the inside stuff of subjective knowledge, and claims that inner territory, but the child does not identify its basic being with either its feelings or its thoughts. [...]
[...] The sound of an animal’s hoof upon the ground fills it with a sense of power and affirmation. [...] Man’s language, and the sound of the words, brings the greatest sense of accomplishment, biologically and psychically. [...]
[...] You do not understand their implications, or the great inner organization that is behind the most simple utterance.
(To Mark D.) Now simply through the energy that you sense in this room you should be able to sense your own emotional reality and strength and tap it and use it. [...]
Now our friend, Ruburt, is not about to go for all this sexual hanky-panky that is described in this precious book, but the man who wrote the book picked up his information from the inner self and then he made a story about it. [...]
“Seth now had this cold inner light suffuse Jane’s wrist and palm to an even more remarkable degree. [...]
[...] I seemed to “click out” when Seth spoke, yet a tremendous sense of energy rushed through me as he did so. [...]
[...] We couldn’t accept the evidence of our senses, nor could we really deny such obvious evidence. [...]
Actually, for the first time in our lives we found ourselves experiencing events that we couldn’t explain, and doubting the obvious evidence of our senses—an uncomfortable spot for anyone. [...]
[...] If you realized thoroughly that your physical world was an illusion, you would not be experiencing sense data.”
[...] … In any sense in which a psychologist of the Western scientific tradition would understand the phrase, I do not believe that Jane Roberts and Seth are the same person, or the same personality, or different facets of the same personality. [...]
[...] An inner voice, presumably Seth’s, told her that she had been feeling sorry for herself, that she must stop brooding over her health at once, get up, and go out for a walk. [...]
[...] In this case, he said, Mrs. Brian had used him as a symbol of her inner self, or supraconsciousness, to deliver help and healing influences as well as advice. [...]
[...] It is important, however, that you realize the fact that there is more creativity and variety in an inner reality than you ever physically perceive.
Only in a context of probabilities can immortality make any sense. [...]
6. For the second time in the session, Seth referred to the chance that the individual might feel insignificant within the enormous reaches of the inner universe. [...]
I find Seth’s discussions about probabilities most intriguing, and sense no physical or emotional threat. [...]
[...] It involves a curious sense of dropping down inwardly, of going slowly beneath the realities we usually perceive…. [...]
[...] Indeed, then, the theory actually says that the ordered universe magically emerged — and evolutionists must certainly believe in a God of Chance somewhere, or in Coincidence with a capital C, for their theories would make no sense at all otherwise.
[...] Man’s imagination can carry him into those other realms — but when he tries to squeeze those truths into frameworks too small, he distorts and bends inner realities so that they become jagged dogmas.
[...] There are also great failures — but these are failures only in comparison with the glittering inner knowledge of the imagination that holds for you those ideals against which you judge your acts.
Your inner pace however depends upon alternating high energy activity. [...] However you have largely understood this on a subconscious basis, and now almost automatically make necessary inner adjustments.
[...] (About Jane and me being essentially alone in that world now after my mother’s death, etc.) In the inner order of events he is walking nearly normally, but the challenge to beliefs must take place on that outer level, and this is now occurring. [...]
There is a correlation between his literal-mindedness and your attention to detail, and if you look at it that way it will make more sense to you. [...]
In sense terms he would learn little about an orange, though he might be able to isolate its elements, predict where others might be found, theorize about its environment — but the greater “withinness” of the orange is not found any place inside of its skin either. [...]
[...] It is not that man stressed physical data less, but that he put it together differently — that in the darkness he relied upon his inner and outer senses in a more unified fashion. [...]
[...] He also hunted very well in the dark, cleverly using all of his senses with high accuracy — the result of learning processes that are now quite lost.
Ruburt’s impulse to take Emir from Prentice—his impulse to call others, his call to Eleanor—all of these events represent a change of mood, and inner decisions of which Ruburt is not as yet aware.
[...] He allowed the impulse to surface initially, and then he allowed himself to act upon it, in a sense “throwing caution to the wind.” [...]
[...] The change in the point of power is also highly significant, for he is doing it now with a good sense of motion and imagery, and without any feelings of contradiction.
It is the ego, practically speaking, who attempts to do the distinguishing here; but the inner core of the self, the inner ego of which we have spoken, manages the basic chore. [...]
It is rather important that the reality of these electromagnetic systems be understood, as they are so important in the construction of physical images and dream images, and since they are responsible for the inner communication which takes place beneath consciousness.
These dreams go unrecognized by the conscious ego; but they do not go unrecorded by the inner self, and they therefore exist, and they form electromagnetic channels of their own to which—make that by which—the physical body itself is affected. [...]
[...] The inner intelligence within you that gives you each life also gives you the conditions of each life. [...]
(3:34.) The species is filled with a powerful sense of curiosity and wonder, and the need for exploration and discovery, so that even a man born as a king through several lives would find himself bored and determined to seek out a different or opposite experience.