Results 1061 to 1080 of 1833 for stemmed:one
[...] One is given to reading books, though he does not carry a portable bar in his car.
May or June, 4th or 5th, the early portion of May or June, also connected here, and one of the men of the five will start a new undertaking, I believe with a different kind of merchandise entirely; having some, though perhaps a distant, connection with fabrics.
[...] This will not keep me from speaking out to you in the future however when you need it, as you have needed it upon one occasion in the past.
[...] (Pause.) A tendency then to run from problems, and a fear of settling in one place.
[...] Now, it is there, however, underneath the topsoil of your mind and yours (Alison) and this one (a student) and at times, Ruburt, and to some extent, this one (Sue). You see, I want you to use the tools and abilities that you have and the intellect is one of them, but I do not want you to concentrate so intently upon using one tool that you forget the others. [...]
[...] On one occasion he was on the phone to you (Janice) and on another occasion he was in another man’s office. Now he worked with his pendulum and discovered one reason for the phlegm and the cough when he was speaking to you, having to do with the fact that his own writing hours were not done. [...]
[...] The life came from All That Is, from the spirit of life itself, and was freely given — to be taken away by no one, or threatened by no one or no force, until that life fulfills its own purposes and decides to travel on.
There is a design and a designer, but they are so combined, the one within and the one without, that it is impossible to separate them. [...]
[...] For one thing, your concepts of time, realistically or practically speaking, as utilized, would become more difficult to maintain in normal life. [...]
Now Give us a moment… (With much humor:) The question on dreams was a good one, and you see I had a good answer.
(The session was held in our back room and was a quiet one. [...]
The sort of things with which we are involved then often imply an interruption of action of this kind, and a translation or transformation of data from one range of electromagnetic energy to another. [...]
The voice seemed to finally be formed, or to rise above this static, and on one occasion the voice was extremely loud.
In Philip’s case, in one way, my job was easier, since the words were not picked up from the outside. [...]
Transformation of energy from one field to another continually goes on. I cannot stress too strongly the fact that in practical actuality the body exists within many fields, and it cannot be explained or understood when it is considered a product of one field only. [...]
[...] Yet this inner self, this inner vitality, is one of the main clues which man refuses to recognize, calling it an unreasonable assumption, but not willing to examine it for those characteristics which show it to be the most reasonable and logical of phenomena.
As you know, at one time it was necessary for the ego to focus exclusively upon outer data, but the channels never closed between the inner self and the ego. [...]
[...] This one (Sue) has abilities from past lives to deal with and to use—and a greater responsibility to use them. This one (Daniel) has the idea that he can skim on through. [...]
In my own book, for an intellectual exercise—and simply for that, since I do believe that all of you do exist—I am going to deal in one chapter with the difficulties of proving—from my vantage point—that three-dimensional reality does exist and is inhabited by creatures—thinking creatures. [...]
([Rachel:] “And a lovable one.”)
[...] Regardless of what you may think of their present performance at any given “time” in quotes, it is from this system that the greatest potentials emerge; for having dealt with it, consciousness undergoes one of the severest tests in learning to handle its own energy.
[...] (Humorously.) This is one of the reasons that you find yourself very impatient with the development of your fellows, who have not had that advantage as yet. [...]
[...] The difficulty will be one of circulation in the limbs and hands, and are already—the symptoms are already—felt by the woman in question.
[...] No works bear their feminine names, for they used male ones. [...] This resulted of course in an overemphasis upon dogma — rules and the ritualization that had to be colorful and rich because it would be the one outlet allowed in which creativity could be handled. [...]
[...] On the one hand you are too specific in your use of the term “sexuality”; yet in another way, and in that context, you feel that any kind of affection must naturally lead to sexual expression, if given its way. [...]
[...] Sexual performance is considered the one safe way of using the great potential of human emotions. [...]
(10:05.) Give us a moment… On the one hand many of you have been taught that sexual expression is wrong, evil, or debasing. [...]
[...] This is a point aside, yet an important one: Food is indeed sacred. Its preparation is more a psychic matter than a physical one. [...]
(The object shows I bought two full sheets of Masonite, each one 4 x 8 feet in dimension. [...] This gave four pieces of Masonite, each one of which was four feet square.
You had one brief experience before this one but did not remember, where you walked along the banks of a misty river landscape. [...]
Ruburt, on one occasion, created a window thought-form on the blank wall through which he actually flew, simply because he held fears and could not imagine going through a solid wall. [...]
Now I understand that to one closely and daily involved with the woman, it is difficult to see purpose or reason in the condition. [...] (One minute pause, eyes closed.)
[...] She was quite surprised when I told her that it had been a slow one, indeed with quite a few long pauses interspersed. [...]
(She said she knew from Seth that Seth had frightened Peg somewhat; that is, his approach had been one she was unaccustomed to, and it would have been better had he talked with Peg about Jesus, His love and healing power, etc.
One night while Rob was busy in the studio, I decided to experiment with a crystal ball. Since I didn’t have one, I substituted a lovely blue bottle which was filled with water and into which I stared intently for a good half hour. [...]
[...] … Chlorophyll is a mental enzyme, however, and it is one of the moving forces in your plane. [...]
[...] If you will read over the above three or four paragraphs, you will come close to seeing where mental and physical become one.
(It might be worth noting here that the property was appraised by an assessor from Ithaca, NY, rather than one from Elmira. As it happened, at the time all three of the Veteran’s Administration appraisers who are based in Elmira were out of town on vacation; therefore the bank in Elmira had to call in a representative from out of town to evaluate the property—and one who had never seen the property before. [...]
[...] In the past I spoke briefly of pulsations, as atoms and molecules were transformed from one energy plane to another, becoming visible to the material field. [...]
Energy not utilized upon one level is simply utilized on a different level. [...]
[...] Nevertheless, one of the basic keys to his character is the overwhelming need to be liked as a human being.
[...] One for which no reputable publishing house has any automatic place.
[...] But beyond that the feeling is that one who has such experiences is by temperament unreliable. [...]
[...] He is not a doctor of anything, for there is no one alive who could give him a degree in his particular line of research, or in yours.
[...] Roger’s list contained a fourth question addressed to Seth; this one concerns the Bahai faith, was formulated by a girl friend of Pat’s, and will be answered by Seth at a later date.
[...] (Pause.) The answer then to one of your questions lies here.
[...] The minus numbers mask integers that have a positive meaning or action (pause), and take on the tasks ordinarily assigned in this dimension to the positive ones.
[...] Both papers he has done on beliefs (this week) apply as beliefs—the one involving you, and today’s.
[...] Spontaneity and energy used in his work was one thing, but allowed physical translation, he felt, could mean bizarre, unreasonable physical complications.
[...] He thought you hated distractions, and for a period of time he felt that you thought him one.
[...] Two particular beliefs here: The party at Bega’s, and your “tirade” —his interpretation, about his dealing with Prentice on one particular occasion. [...]
This inner sense is not only an important one but is immensely beneficial, and is not misused in any way by those able to use it. [...] It does not imply that one entity can control another. [...]
As far as the inner senses are concerned, they merge smoothly, one into the other, operating as a unit in what I will call pure unhampered circumstances. [...]