Results 1 to 20 of 978 for stemmed:rememb
If you call on me to help you in a dream projection, I will help you, though you may or may not remember the dream projection or my help. Joseph will find himself more likely to remember simple projections that do not involve any featured levitation. These will be the easiest for you, Joseph, to recall.
Now, first, Ruburt is having some success in turning the focus of his attention away from the symptoms, and if he continues and remembers, then his progress will be speedy. He followed my suggestions several times today, with good results.
In sleep, you do inhabit other planes, as I have told you. The term “spirit guides” is not the best, and Ruburt disapproves of it. The idea is quite legitimate and sound, however. I have on many occasions been with you both during such instances. As you progress, you will be able to remember more and more about such encounters.
There is no substitute for the training that you receive as you learn the knack of remembering your dreams. The very training helps you manipulate more effectively in both ordinary waking and dream conditions.
Immediately get up and rid yourself of the suggestion that you cannot remember. Begin giving yourself the suggestion that you can remember. Now do not hit yourself over the head with the suggestion, simply tell yourself that you are now free to remember your projections. [...]
[...] You do not want to remember. You can tell yourself that you do, but until you really want to remember, you will not. [...]
[...] You have little contact with these but always the inner self remembers its offspring. Therefore, also do we remember you and your system. [...]
([Rachel:] “Tell me why I can’t remember.”)
Let Ruburt remember the playfulness of games. And above all remember that pretending is not a lie (re Cinderella). He can pretend to be well and flexible if he remembers that, without feeling any contradictions at all.
[...] It is harder to put up that inhibiting factor than it is to simply remember them. [...] Now when you are ready, and it is work in probabilities is a prerequisite, you will be able to meet and remember so that we can carry on class twice a week. [...] And you will remember both the location and what you are learning. [...]
(To Sue.) Now you met one particular woman at a supermarket this week, and you do not remember. [...]
[...] Now you are having many experiences now that are vital to you in the dream state, and I want you to tell yourself that it is easy to remember them. [...]
Then those of you who are adventurous can begin to embark on some night time experiences such as you have never remembered before. [...]
It is much more natural to remember your dreams than not to remember them. [...] In those terms, if you remembered your dreams, and if you benefited consciously from that knowledge, even your physical survival would be better assured.
[...] Even your remembered dreams are often verbalized constructs. [...] Those remembered dreams have meaning and are very valuable, but they are already organized for you to some extent, and put into a shape that you can somewhat recognize.
[...] What you could call my dreaming state is involved with the levels I spoke of that exist beneath your remembered dreams.
[...] [There is no such apartment.] I remember that I had forgotten the existence of this apartment and am angry with myself. [...]
[...] Then on the staircase, in a pile of neatly-stacked clothing I discover a lovely dark green jacket with fur collar and zipper that is mine, and I remember now that I put it away last year for the season and forgot it until now. [...]
[...] How is it that I remember a time in which I blossomed? How is it I vaguely remember a summer in a time in which I was strong and spontaneous and free? [...]
(To Sue.) For this one, you did not remember our encounter. You also had another experience two nights ago dealing with probabilities that you did not remember. [...]
[...] You do not remember the short trips, either. You will remember when you are ready, as I have told you before. [...]
[...] You stood on your own two feet, and yet you remembered what was told to you and put it into operation and used it in your own way. [...]
Two: I will approve of and rejoice in my accomplishments, and I will be as vigorous in listing these—as rigorous in remembering them—as I have ever been in remembering and enumerating my failures or lacks of accomplishment. [...]
Three: I will remember the creative framework of existence, in which I have my being. [...]
[...] Therefore I will plant accomplishments and successes, and I will do this by remembering that nothing can exist in the future that I do not want to be there.
(2. Much of Jane’s trance material on how individuals use dreams personally came through in answer to a question of mine that we’d often speculated about lately: If most people do not remember their dreams most of the time, of what use can their dreams be to them? [...]
“Even if you don’t consciously remember your dreams, you do get the message. [...]
“If you will remember our imaginary man as he stands upon a street, you will recall that I spoke of his feeling all of the unitary essences of each living thing within his range, using the first Inner Sense. [...]
Remember, according to Seth these Inner Senses are used by the whole self constantly. [...]
[...] This is why he could not remember that the envelope was addressed to him. In his dream, therefore, which he knew he would remember because of his training, he then added shielding fabrications, interwoven with the valid information.
[...] Jane had not met Helen McIlwain for at least fifteen years, she estimates, and remembers her best from her, Jane’s, grade school years.
[...] She didn’t remember going out of her body. [...] Nor could she remember any more about the episode. She didn’t remember seeing herself in her chair, for instance, nor did she see me as I sat on the couch taking notes. [...]
(While telling me this, Jane abruptly remembered that during part of the delivery she seemed to be standing beside the long, floor-to-ceiling bookcase that divides our living room from her workroom. [...]
[...] Ruburt had several dreams concerning Miss Price, also a therapeutic dream last evening that he did not remember. During this period he did not remember his dreams because he purposely closed subconscious channels.
(Jane said she cannot remember Ann’s house, except that she recalls it as quite old. [...] She cannot remember the door.
Remember, the normal consciousness is not synonymous with the ego. [...]
[...] You must first of all remember the simple truth—that there is no upper or lower to the self. [...]
It is all right to be knuckleheaded when you are awake, but when you are dreaming, you should allow yourself more freedom—remember your love of color. Remember that when you go to sleep at night; remember the colors that you see—for you do see them and you can paint them. [...]
It seems that your dreams are ineffective or unknown to you, or poorly realized, if you don’t remember them. Or having remembered them you can’t interpret them properly, meaning that in your terms you can’t make sense of the dream message. [...]
(Rather often lately we’ve speculated about why most people don’t remember their dreams. [...]
Even if you don’t consciously remember your dreams, you do get the message. [...]
In the past, if people didn’t remember their dreams, they’d project their dream events upon natural events, or read objective events as symbols that would actually express the dream itself. [...]
[...] Whether or not you remember your dreams, for example, a certain portion of you, under hypnosis, could remember every dream that you ever had in your life. So a certain portion of you remembers those nonmoments when you are not focused in physical reality, when your existence is in another dimension of actuality entirely and you are perceiving what I will call, in your term of reference, nonintervals. [...]
[...] Now, I tell you to remember your dreams. In your context I will tell you again not only to remember your dreams, but to learn to come awake in the middle of them and realize that you can manipulate within them. [...]
[...] Remember, also, that this life is a dimension of experience and reality even if it is, in contrast, a dream in a higher level of reality in which you have your larger consciousness.