Results 61 to 80 of 1285 for stemmed:over
[...] Any weakness on your part would signal to you the loss of inner independence, the loss of a battle that you had thought over years ago.
You have literally turned over your emotional affiliation now to Ruburt, so you are in this respect free.
The girl’s remark of surprise: “I didn’t expect to see you here,” was taken by the overly conscientious self as just rebuke. [...]
[...] You need not tell the other person or you may, but if you refuse to ignore the feeling, the feeling builds up until someday the poor man makes a simple, innocent mood [sic], you will beat him over the head, or worse, develop a knock in your knee because you want to hit him over the head and do not dare to do so. [...]
[...] You use suggestion in the same way that you read a paragraph from a book that you think you should read perhaps for five minutes, but then you allow your (words lost)to take over completely and it seems to you that you have no control. [...]
[...] When you have allowed negative habits, however, to take over, then somewhere you must draw the line for the negative habits knock away the discipline. [...]
[...] There is no one else that has control over your own thought patterns and you would be very upset, indeed, if anyone else did. [...]
[...] Running over the hills, I leap from ground to a high ledge. I am not satisfied with the leap, so move “backward through the air” to my original spot, and do the whole thing over. [...]
(Then Lizzie Roohan calls out to me from next door and I go over to see her. [...]
[...] At this time I seemed to be in a bed, suspended first over the trails, and then in a room.
[...] I believe he was about four inches tall, and I saw his skis twisted over each other as he fell.
(Resuming our chronology: On October 24, 1978, Jane worked out the Table of Contents for Seth’s Psyche, and started her Introduction for it on the 26th; we mailed Psyche to Tam in sections as we put the manuscript together, and finished with that endeavor on November 9. On November 14 Eleanor Friede visited us to renew an old friendship and to go over Emir with Jane. [...] Jane and I are still going over it.
(Although each of us had looked over Mass Events occasionally, still it seemed strange to hear Seth come through with new material for it after all of that time had passed, and equally strange to resume work on these notes. [...]
(“Looking over those nine-and-a-half months of sessions now, it’s fairly obvious what Seth was up to. [...]
[...] Jane has been looking over his material on Mass Events every so often lately, though, with the idea of going back to work on it. [...]
Now when this ego becomes overly concerned over practical matters it becomes overly conditioned to negative responses. [...]
[...] I cannot say that Ruburt would go mad over a painting on a kitchen wall, or anything else on a kitchen wall, but then Jane is a different Ruburt all over again.
[...] However when the ego becomes involved with fears to a greater or lesser extent, it ceases to be an effective tool and becomes instead a hammer hitting you incessantly over the head.
I would suggest also, though I don’t mean to be presumptuous, that you ask Mr. Clauss over, where he can get a good look at your paintings. [...]
[...] Jane was so enthusiastic over this idea that she forgot to be nervous before the session began.
[...] He has felt guilty over the thought of taking any space from you, and the guilt made him feel resentful.
[...] Many planes are given over to the training in the use of one or two of the most important inner senses. [...]
[...] I have mentioned the advantages of a painting over a piece of sculpture, and an idea not fully captured will find further expression.
Very briefly: (John) Fuller (see session 808 re John Fuller notes) is by turns overly credulous and overly critical. [...]
[...] In Ruburt’s case it actually reassures the past self of any doubts or fears—doubts and fears that are also reflected, but that it has already chosen a framework or a given frame of existence that emphasizes certain kinds of experience over others. [...]
He can be, however, again, overly credulous as well, so that he is always between tensions. [...]
And (to Theodore) you have been so sensitive over there in the corner. [...]
[...] And, to some extent, our friend over here is correct in that you can use sensitivity sessions themselves as simply another mask, in which case you never show yourself. [...]
Now, you (to Garrett) had your strongest sense of immediacy with our friend over here, and he encountered each of you according to his own light, at the moment, as he met you. [...]
(We would like to insert a note here to Roger, to the effect that we would like him to go over the two sessions and give us a detailed written summary of the data given through Jane, in answer to the mathematical questions he sent Jane. [...]
[...] The ratio minus zero over one three seven, leaping back now to the other.
[...] (Jane now sat with her head back, eyes closed; the position seemed to make it more difficult for her to speak.) Untold miseries over the authorship. [...]
[...] I told him sessions ago that the poetic and psychic portions of his personality were deeply united, and now looking over his old records he knows that I was correct.
[...] These notes contain a brief summary of an unscheduled session held over the Xmas holidays, withSue Mullin and Carl Watkins as witnesses. [...]
[...] He could have read his old poetry over 50 times in the past two years, without realizing what he has finally realized now.
[...] In the process she has come to read over a lot of her earlier work, with eye-opening insights, etc.)
[...] You each have a tendency to over-idealize yourselves, and therefore to find yourselves wanting by contrast. The over-idealization is rigid. [...]
[...] It is only when he tries to become overly literal that he becomes overly concerned with time. [...]
(Jane and I have been very upset over the holidays about her eye condition, and my chest disturbances. [...]
[...] At the same time, of course, you would certainly berate a Van Gogh for his overly emotional behavior.
(Eleanor Friede visited Saturday and Sunday, as planned, and went over parts of Emir with Jane. [...]
[...] The people involved first of all had been told by doctors—medical doctors—that they themselves had no control over their own disease, that the symptoms could be lessened somewhat—perhaps—but that there was no hope for recovery.
[...] We were interrupted by a UPS delivery of books from Eleanor Friede—so quickly had she gotten them on their way to us after her visit over the weekend. [...]
[...] We thought the television adaptation contained many fine things, though—a number of excellent individual performances, although the story line was hard to follow over four episodes. [...]
13. During the 10:36 break for Session 740, which was held a couple of months ago, I wrote that the list of house connections associated with our move to the hill house had grown to over 40 items, “and continues to grow.” [...] It’s neither the most inconsequential item on our list, or the most spectacular — but recently we learned through a close relative of the Steffans (I’ll call them), the couple from whom we bought the hill house, that at a small social gathering over two years ago Jane had spontaneously given something of a psychic “reading” for Mrs. Steffans. [...]
[...] Not all of his material tonight is given over to questions, however; much of the rest of it, covering matters other than those relating to “Unknown” Reality, is deleted.)
[...] Included are some very intriguing excerpts from the 14th session, which was held over 11 years ago. [...]
6. Seth spoke of “strands of reality” here, we think, because today Jane had been going over her material on the stages of consciousness and strands of consciousness for chapters 24 and 25, respectively, of Politics.
[...] The kitchen opens off the living room, so we closed the blinds in both rooms and pulled the curtains over them.
[...] She wore a black sweater with the sleeves half pushed up and the cold white light spread up over the thickening wrist, up her forearm, to the sweater.
[...] The glow suffused the palm, eliminating the shadows normally to be seen there, so that it did not seem that the fingers were merely folded over.