Results 1141 to 1160 of 1833 for stemmed:one
[...] After much discussion we decided to offer the divan to our neighbor across the hall, Leonard Yaudes, who needed one in good condition. [...] But in order to make room for the divan, Leonard first had to get rid of his old one. [...]
[...] Then I saw the angled pieces eventually lay themselves down upon the base line so that I couldn’t tell one from another, or beginning from the end.
[...] And there’s the feeling of circular ripples from the small wheels, going all the way down to the right foot and toes; and with this, the feeling that these small wheels, circles, or clock-works have been too tight; constricted; and that these in the head are the “master ones” and as they release, motion is being restored to some degree all over. [...]
I think my eyes move further to each side than they did—though when they do the images do get transposed one on the other sometimes; but my eyes felt like hardboiled eggs for weeks; now they feel much softer. [...]
(On May 28, a nurse in hydro dropped an empty pan on Jane’s left instep, making one of those depression cuts in the flesh. [...]
These concepts have many cousins, so that we actually have an entire family of beliefs that are all in one way or another related.
(4:28.) We must also remember, however, that in a fashion beliefs themselves are tools, and that in some situations beliefs that seem quite negative can also clear the way for more beneficial ones. [...]
I will close with one note, however. Under the circumstances the vacation idea, with or without variations, is a good one, during which focus upon the physical aspects of life should be emphasized and encouraged. [...]
[...] He did not: therefore the enforced solitude, the narrowing of other interests until his vitality was forced in one direction, the inner direction. [...]
[...] I grimly promised Jane that there were going to be changes; and this was to not at all minimize my own role in this problem—it was merely my stated vehement desire that this madness come to an end, that I was ready for a change, and demanded one.)
(The strange thing in this is that this session contains new material, after all of the private ones we’ve had. [...]
[...] When continuity is taken into consideration however then the analogy is a poor one, since the word channel seems to imply a more or less permanent opening, and this is not true. One of the marvels of your outer senses is their reach. [...]
[...] Breathing for example can be magnified to an almost frightening degree when one concentrates upon listening to his own breath. [...]
[...] Since we had dispensed with taking messages through the board in the main, this session was the slowest-paced one to date. [...]
[...] I had only one page of it typed from my notes, and now neither of us could remember the rest of it. [...]
[...] At various times one belief would color her experience nearly to the exclusion of the other. [...]
She had wanted to leave her job for another one but was afraid of taking the step, so she created circumstances in which the decision was seemingly taken out of her hands; it would appear as if she were the victim of unfeeling co-workers, jealous and misunderstanding, and a boss who would not stand up for her.
[...] The situation is one in which many young women are involved, and this material can help them solve dilemmas of which they may have been unaware previously. [...]
[...] Since strong intensities are indeed natural results of weaker intensities, it would be meaningless to call one present and one past. [...]
[...] Within the electrical system, intensity is also responsible for the potentiality, duration and electrical mass, which is a mass of a different sort; a mass that takes up no space, and is not made of matter as you know it, but mass whose thickness is one of varying electrical intensities which form a definite shape, a separate field more or less, an electrical coded counterpart for physical matter.
(Jane, here, took quite a long pause, one of the few such that she used during the session.)
When the pulsation is weak you call it past, when it is strongest you name it present, and the one that seems to you not yet as strong as present, you name future. [...]
[...] There will be one, and I will write it.
[...] One at least will be specifically written by me for that purpose.
One book will deal primarily with metaphysical realities, and will be designed for those more intellectually gifted. [...]
[...] His ego is (underlined) a kind one, but the structure of any ego is such that it considers, or can consider easily, psychic ability as a sign of its own power; or feel possessive of the ability, and overly proud of it, even when it knows it originates in other layers of the self. [...]
(Today Jane has had a steady barrage of bodily sensations of incipient release and change—her most active and encouraging one so far, since we began our program on April 3, 1978. Today was also one of her most uncomfortable, however, due to the muscular soreness involved as little-used muscles in her trunk began to act. [...]
(I explained to her, as we waited for the session to begin, my dilemma about Note 6 for Appendix 22—my feeling of time wasted after I’d spent a couple of days writing it very carefully—only to have it fall apart at the last moment because I’d forgotten to deal with one crucial point. [...]
[...] We’ve had a succession of visitors, all but one of them unannounced, and have lost work time as a result. [...]
The older man was the one you saw. [...]
[...] The statement is, comparatively speaking, a simple one, so that we can see what Ruburt can do with it.
[...] At the moment we’re sure of but one thing: A nuclear reactor meltdown, like that threatened at Three Mile Island, is just not acceptable in our society under any circumstances. [...] We think such alternate sources should be pursued even if they cost more in economic terms than nuclear power, either initially or continually, for surely none of them could produce the horrendous results — and enormous costs — that would follow even one massive failure at a nuclear power plant.
[...] Local milk supplies are safe to drink, since dairy cattle are eating corn and hay that’s been stored for months, but no one really knows the effects of radiation on the unborn calves being carried by many cows in the plant area. [...]
[...] The word seems to suggest elements out of control, or motion that goes from one extreme to another. [...]
[...] As I sat there I started to get more from Seth on one of the subjects mentioned in the session. [...]
(This is the first time Jane held two sessions in one day, even though both were relatively brief. [...]
[...] There was a constant stream of people passing our table in the coffee shop, but no one paid us any attention.
(After reading these notes Jane reminded me that during the session Seth also told R. Van Over that one of the sponsors or members of his new research society would pull out—that this person was somewhat of a disrupting influence, etc. [...]
[...] I saw the family with children standing to one side, quietly waiting, wearing hats and topcoats, and so forth. [...]
(I didn’t eat lunch because Lynn had arranged a surprise birthday party for one of the nurses, and she invited me to share in the food. [...]
[...] The heater in 330 was working again, for some mysterious reason, since Jane said no one had been in to check it today, and yesterday the fellow hadn’t been able to get it going. [...]
(I remember also seeing an article not long ago on the migrations of the Monarch butterfly, but doubt if I’ll be able to locate that one easily.
[...] You are involved in a living process—but one of such multidimensional activity that sometimes you see of course but one chapter in a saga whose full complexion is far different.
[...] On the one hand he knows that he is involved in a façade, playing a game, pretending to be mad. [...]
[...] The creative challenge is there for him, and it is one he chose himself.
[...] You are then further motivated to seek other answers than the official ones.
(Pause at 10:19.) As racial problems may be worked out on many levels, through a riot or a natural disaster, or a combination of both, according to the intensity of the situation on a psychological level; and as physical symptoms can be pleas for help and recognition, so can natural misfortunes be utilized by members of one portion of the country, or one part of the world, to obtain aid from other portions.
(In connection with the flood material in this session and the next one, we refer the reader once again to the notes for the 613th session in Chapter One.)
[...] (Seth describes feeling-tones in the 613th session in Chapter One.) According to the mass emotional conditions, various excesses are built up physically; these are then thrown off into the atmosphere in different form. [...]