Results 161 to 180 of 448 for stemmed:memori

WTH Part One: Chapter 6: May 12, 1984 discomfort birthday hemorrhoids uncomfortable downhill

[...] Such fears show that the distrust of the body is still to some extent present, so he should refresh his memory on the connections between femininity, his physical body, and health.

TES8 Session 357 July 31, 1967 Venice Pete Jet fire dimensional

And no memory, you see, would ever be lost, and nor is any memory lost. [...]

UR2 Section 6: Session 731 January 20, 1975 plant selfhood ancestral ancestors chromosomes

[...] Biologically you do indeed carry within you, then, the memories of your particular ancestors. [...]

Since one portion of your heritage is physical, in those terms, those memories can be translated again, back into emotional and psychological events, though usually they are not in your societies.

NotP Chapter 10: Session 794, February 21, 1977 brain orange neural double sequences

[...] First of all, your memories, feelings, and emotions, while connected to the body and while leaving traces, are separate.

[...] The so-called ancient portions of the brain (among them the brainstem — limbic system) contain “the mind’s memories.” [...]

TSM Chapter Eighteen thread agony God gestalt yearning

“All That Is retains memory of that state, and it serves as a constant impetus—in your terms—toward renewed creativity. Each self, as a part of All That Is, therefore also retains memory of that state. [...]

[...] And you create for the same reason, and within each of you is the memory of that primal agony—that urge to create and free all probable consciousness into actuality.

TES7 Session 308 December 12, 1966 Gladys jcc Austin memo Nancy

[...] Memory of past lives can be achieved under some circumstances.

[...] Jane forgot to buy the vegetables hence her memory of the incident. [...]

[...] Subconscious memory evidently plays a part here. [...]

UR1 Section 3: Session 695 May 6, 1974 Mama Papa ancestors children official

[...] As time goes by, however, the children lose their memories of their home tongue. [...]

TES7 Jane’s Notes Monday, September 26, 1966 Barb Greenwich Connecticut stingers Rob

[...] Very little memory of what I said but when I stopped Barb checked several points out as very good. [...]

[...] Then suddenly I was in a very deep trance of which I have no memory—except at the very end, when I was yelling my lungs out, and I believe, flat on the floor crying. [...]

SS Appendix: ESP Class Session: Tuesday, January 12, 1971 Bert Gnosticism Jim kick wring

[...] Words and phrases spoken now will trigger your memories, and those memories will become alive if you allow them to.

TES8 Session 366 September 25, 1967 competitor Searle Bradley John Gleason

[...] None of us had any conscious memory of reading about it, etc.)

UR1 Appendix 6: (For Session 687) ancient pathological article Appendix parallel

(12:19.) “Some of the experiments with man-animals didn’t work out along our historic lines, but the ghost memories of those probabilities still linger in our biological structure, and in our terms can be activated according to circumstances.

SS Part One: Chapter 5: Session 523, April 13, 1970 speech convey unselfconsciously transmitted words

(Jane had a “memory,” now, of giving part of Seth’s data from the bookcase area, of seeing the living room from a different viewpoint. [...]

SS Part Two: Chapter 16: Session 567, February 17, 1971 fluctuations multiple atom microsecond steadily

[...] The physically oriented consciousness, responding to one phase of the atom’s activity, comes alive and awake to its particular existence, but in between are other fluctuations in which consciousness is focused upon entirely different systems of reality; each of these coming awake and responding, and each one having no sense of absence, and memory only of those particular fluctuations to which they respond.

NotP Chapter 1: Session 753, August 4, 1975 psyche wristwatch local birthright woods

[...] But in your terms the child entering the real woods becomes involved in its life cycle, treads upon leaves that fell yesterday, rests beneath trees far older than his or her memory, and looks up at night to see a moon that will soon disappear. [...]

ECS4 ESP Class Session, December 7, 1971 Sumari language Janice Bette seed

[...] They are memories that come to you from yourselves from both the future and the past. [...]

Don’t worry so much about the memory. [...]

SS Part Two: Chapter 20: Session 578, April 5, 1971 Speakers ten training number Christ

They imprinted it, however, upon the physical brain through the use of memory. [...]

[...] I do have a memory of physical existence however, and this automatically helps me in translating your mental data into physical form. [...]

UR2 Section 4: Session 705 June 24, 1974 mutants cells kingdoms species cellular

[...] They contain within themselves memory of all the “previous” forms they have been a part of.

6. Session 654, in Chapter 14 of Personal Reality, contains information on the changing cellular memory, genetic codes, and neuronal patterns. [...]

TES1 Session 11 January 1, 1964 mirror palm wrist fingers hand

[...] The following pages contain my own account of what happened, written at various times as memory served. [...]

[...] She made detailed notes on our amateur seance the day after it took place, when her memory was fresh. [...]

UR2 Appendix 22: (For Session 724) Roman soldier tower Jerusalem Peter

“Rob: In one of my own ‘past-life’ memories, I was a guard or sentry on a tower like the one in your drawings. [...]

[...] Peter told me after class that my sketches had instantly rearoused his memories, although in his experience he’d seen the event from different angles. [...]

(In the 724th session the following night, Seth remarked upon such circumstances, saying that while Peter and I weren’t counterparts, we’re “closely enough allied so that in certain terms you ‘share’ some of the same psychic memories, like cousins who speak about old dimly remembered brothers.”13

TSM Chapter Eight test Rob portrait Instream impressions

Rob has a strong visual memory. [...] My visual memory is poor, in contrast, and so is my eyesight (I have no depth perception). [...]

[...] For instance, he included among other impressions, “a commemoration of a murder … a statue …” It developed that the Gallaghers had passed a statue, a memorial to Sir Harry Oakes who had been murdered in a sensational, well-publicized case in 1943. [...]

[...] Memory is fallible, so we always tried to get anyone involved to write up their reports at once for easier and more reliable checking.

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