Results 221 to 240 of 1286 for stemmed:point
[...] (A point with which I can disagree.) Now you are dealing, through your creative endeavors, aside even from the psychic work, with highly subjective material; many people are completely unaware for great periods of time of their own mental and emotional states. [...]
[...] I think also the anger partly stemmed from hearing the same things over again in some instances—that is, that we had made so little progress seemingly in dealing with vital points. [...]
[...] Because he appeared so talkative, you did not recognize the point where he began to hide his fearful thought or feelings from you. [...]
(This in answer to one of the points I had been mad about earlier in the session.)
[...] The warning points in particular to young people, showing in capsule form and in exaggerated horror the ultimate ends of such fanaticism when it is allowed to play itself out.
[...] The main point is for him to trust the process of healing—and for you to reinforce that belief, for it will in itself accelerate the process. [...]
(With some amusement:) You are both experiencing what should be a natural time of rest—not a low point. [...]
[...] At some point however thread A would turn into thread B. In the same manner at some point thread B would turn into C and so forth.
[...] Yet each thread itself would not be one-dimensional, but of many dimensions, and conceivably (underlined), if you knew how (Jane pointed at me for emphasis, still speaking rapidly), there would be ways of leaping from one thread to the other. [...]
At some inconceivable point all of the threads would be in turn traversed. [...]
(These two ideas from Seth, which came through in connection with his data on moment points, are to me very suggestive of the concept of long sound. From the 681st session:) In your terms — the phrase is necessary — the moment point, the present, is the point of intersection between all existences and reality. [...]
In closing: See the 593rd session in the Appendix of Seth Speaks for Seth’s material on black holes, white holes, and coordination points: “A black hole is a white hole turned inside out … The holes, therefore, or coordination points [points of double reality, or where realities merge], are actually great accelerators that reenergize energy itself.” [...]
(Jane said the high-voiced, rapid delivery reminded her of Seth Two, then mentioned a point I’d forgotten: She’d experienced a similar effect once before — last month, while writing poetry, and only mentally. [...]
[...] The dead hole seems to swallow itself, with the real fast particles like a lid that gradually diminishes … From our point of view the hole is closed, say, once the faster-than-light particles follow the slower core backward into beginnings.”
The authors made several excellent points, without however carrying the main point in any actuality. [...]
[...] The book should make one point plain: Identity, despite all appearances to the contrary, does not reside primarily in the ego. [...]
[...] I pointed toward the window, and Jane caught my meaning.)
We will now continue with a discussion that we have begun concerning the nature of matter, and bringing up in particular one point I wish to make clear.
We will again use this chair, this time to explain our point. [...]
(Jane pointed at Bob Piper. [...]
(When we asked for a full levitation, it seemed the table did its best to achieve this, getting all legs off the floor except the last tiny point of contact of the third leg; it would then go in circles beneath our hands, or begin to dance about, eventually. [...]
[...] The pressure finally reached the point where Bill Gallagher could not force the third table leg back to the floor. [...]
(The two obvious points are that the table broke, and that a great force was needed to do this. [...]
[...] I personally did not think we were unappreciative of what had taken place this evening, but Seth proceeded to drive the point home rather unmercifully, I thought at the time. [...]
Your trip (Sunday, April 13; we drove to Cortland, NY) was beneficial, but it was impeded by negative thoughts of Ruburt’s, and also to some degree by the fact that you pointed out his symptoms without reminding him that the inner self could and would minimize them. [...]
It is helpful to point out that he is holding himself stiffly for example, but not in that manner. [...]
The word itself is the antithesis of restraint, and it is an excellent word for you to use—you—(pointing to me) and understand. [...]
[...] The main point is the acceptance that all of this is as natural as rain or the seasons.
[...] At the point of decision this alternate self made a different conclusion: that it experience Street Three as physical reality. [...]
[...] Your consciousness is at a point where it is beginning to understand the significance of “predictive action” — and predictive action always involves probabilities.
In certain terms (underlined), you are the recognized “result” of all of the decisions you have made up to this point in your life. [...]
In The Nature of Personal Reality I stated that the point of action occurs in the present.10 In Adventures in Consciousness Ruburt said, quite properly, that time experience actually splashed out from the present to form an apparent past and future.11
Now, there are several points here.
The very point of my material is precisely that it goes beyond ideas conventionally held in most, quote, “mediumistic circles.” [...]
On the other hand he is too suggestible to other peoples needs, in that your point made earlier is correct; for through the material many more can be helped. [...]
[...] At this point he felt they were directed against him. [...] At that point he felt completely alone. [...]
A side point here, but with some reference: his mother always told him that he would destroy those he loved, and he feared that any success of his might show you up if you had not achieved your own. [...]
The next chapter will deal with the experience of any personality at the point of death, and with the many variations on this basic adventure. [...]
[...] This chapter will contain some rather fascinating points, for not only do you form the physical reality that you know, but you are also forming other quite valid environments in other realities by your present thoughts, desires and emotions.
[...] This will lead up to the basic communication used by human personalities as you understand them, and point out these inner communications as existing independently of the physical senses, which are merely physical extensions of inner perception.
[...] I think I made some good points; even Bill said he probably exaggerated man’s greed, yet he wasn’t about to change his views. [...]
[...] These dreams have been operating as a series, as Jane has pointed out, which increases the value of a person’s dreams in unexpected ways. [...]
(“After supper tonight I told Jane that I felt as though I was “near a breaking point,” that I might have to seek medical help. [...]
As the evening progressed Sue Watkins became more and more upset, as Bill pointed out the toll that society demanded, the impossible stakes and the penalties that must be paid. [...]
[...] As you know, I do not make predictions, yet he has reached a point with his beliefs, and an efficiency with some methods of implementing them, that I foresee a dramatic change for the better.
You decided to take the focus point in a determination to rid yourself of the underlying causes once and for all. [...]
The person so involved must be extremely disturbed to begin with: up in arms against social, national, or religious issues, and therefore able to serve as a focus point for countless other individuals affected in the same manner.
Beneath these ideas is the fear of the mind itself, the belief that its abilities are fine and dependable up to a point — but if it goes too far then it is in trouble.