Results 361 to 380 of 1197 for stemmed:need
[...] But then you do not need words either. [...] (This sentence was written in the margin of the Yale copy.) It is only you that believe you need words, otherwise I would not have to deal with them and words can be very deceiving and quite confusing. [...] We do not need words, mental or otherwise. Thoughts in your terms suggest words and we do not need words. [...]
These will reinforce the family group when the child most needs protection. [...]
[...] Since the parents are bigger and stronger and fulfill so many of its needs, it will attempt to bring its experience into line with their expectations and beliefs. [...]
(“I need the help, too.”)
If you are poor, you purposely pretend that you have all you need financially. [...]
[...] He may be the voice of our combined selves, saying, ‘While you are conscious bodies, remember what it was like and will be like to be bodiless, to be freewheeling energy without a name but with a voice that does not need tongue, with a creativity that does not need flesh. [...]
[...] Some were devoted to personal matters, some given for specific people who needed help, and some were in answer to philosophical questions not connected with the book. [...]
I’ve found that only my own writing gives me the particular kind of creative satisfaction that I need, however — the conscious involvement with unconscious material, the “excitement of the chase.” [...]
[...] Among a larger variety of possible actions, man was suddenly faced with a need to make choices, that within that context had not been made “before.”
[...] The awakening mentioned earlier, then, found man rousing from his initial “dreaming condition,” faced suddenly with the need for action in a world of space and time, a world in which choices became inevitable, a world in which he must choose among probable actions—and from an infinite variety of those choose which events he would physically actualize. [...]
[...] That field of exploration is so vast, however, that it needs boundaries and determinations also. [...]
(Long pause.) All societies basically need the insertion of fresh challenge and knowledge, however, or they stagnate. [...]
When the person is a child no longer that need no longer exists in the same fashion. [...]
[...] Of course I often have such thoughts, and have often been completely baffled by her behavior in this regard; I said I thought the fact that we were busy—even more so than usual—should have nothing to do with holding off on such a need. [...]
[...] She needs more?)
It is true, cortisone is released through the system in love-making, and Ruburt needs it. [...]
An overly conscientious, restrictive mental and physical state evolved, in which the organism’s natural physical need for survival was in every way hampered. [...] Its technology was extremely activated, and propelled onward as it strove to develop, for example, artificial foods so that it would not need to kill for survival in any way.
[...] At the same time he often feels the need to stand apart from life, from the fleeting thoughts, the daffodils or the insight, so that he will not be lost completely in the moment, but able to form almost a second self with a larger viewpoint, who can then more clearly examine and understand the thought, the moment, or the insight.
[...] Most artist, painters, do not feel the need, then, to “later” examine the moments of creativity themselves, nor to form still another subjective platform from which to examine the creative process.
[...] You will then still organize experience (underline organize), but you will not need artificial aids such as time to lean upon. You will not need to see thoughts materialized in physical matter, for you will have long since learned that the thoughts and not the matter are the basic reality. [...]
[...] Unless negative beliefs stand in your way, then creative ideas that you contribute to the work will automatically take care of your needs, and it is truly idiotic to want to substitute that good fortune for such parochial concepts like the male as breadwinner, or the male performing in a given definable fashion. [...]
[...] I need some time to go over all of this.”)
[...] I just wanted to watch the television program [Upstairs, Downstairs], but when that was done I felt better, and I knew you needed the help....” [...]
[...] In a flash the understanding led me to a very obvious conclusion that, it seems I should have reached on my own earlier: the knotty feeling was very much like the muscle spasms I’d experienced in the back, years ago when we’d lived on West Water St. These had been so bad that I’d lost months of work; the sessions had begun as Jane tried to help me, as well as for her own needs, in 1963.