Results 21 to 40 of 978 for stemmed:rememb
[...] I asked Jane why she hadn’t at once asked Shawn to save it, but when she remembered to some ten minutes later, it was too late; Shawn had cleaned up the mess and thrown it all out. [...]
[...] It is a good idea to remember that the neurological quickness happens in all portions of the body. [...]
Once again, it is most important that Ruburt keep his goals in mind, and remember that despite any given mood the healing process continues. [...]
It would be a good idea once or twice for him to remember the Jungle Gym (in Webster, New York where my younger brother Bill and his family live), and the first time he remembered faltering in a physical fashion. [...]
(Both of us instantly remembered the Jungle Gym at the lakeside park in Webster, where we’d first noticed Jane’s faltering in physical movement so many years ago. [...]
[...] He gave us a lecture that I swore to remember. [...] The lecture had been so real that I was certain I’d remember it. [...]
Then I remembered that on first going to bed, I’d felt that someone was in the room. [...] We talked for some time, but now I can’t remember the conversation. [...]
[...] Sometimes one of us remembers, sometimes the other does. On several instances, however, both of us have remembered and recorded our experiences which were similar but not identical. We hope to do much more work here. [...]
[...] At the time I remembered asking Jane in the past how you could distinguish between dream projection and dreams. [...]
[...] Each cell remembers its past though all of its parts have been and are being continually replaced.3
[...] Though all of the tissue in that hand has often been completely replaced by the time you are twenty-seven, for example, the identity within each of those present cells remembers that injury.
[...] Yet remember that the cells in your twenty-seven-year-old hand are in no physical way the same cells that experienced any of those events. [...]
[...] Often such dreams bring about behavior changes whether or not you remember them in the morning. [...]
[...] I remembered and described three of them, thought there was a fourth, but couldn’t remember it. [...]
[...] After reading this first page of notes about Peg G. and the paintings, I remember my old ideas … that we organize the contents of our minds along certain lines that then become habitual.
[...] In fact, I had offered him milk as I went over my predictions … I suddenly remembered something else. [...]
[...] 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 and 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 were perceiving what I call, in your terms of reference, pardon me, nonintervals. [...]
[...] Now, I tell you to remember your dreams and in your context, I tell you again, not only to remember your dreams, but to learn to come awake in the middle of your dream and realize that you can manipulate within it, and that you form it, and that it is yours not something thrust upon you in which you are powerless. [...]
[...] You can come to yourselves, therefore, through psy-time and remember also, that this dream 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. [...]
And now I bid you good evening and I bid you pleasant dreams and when I tell you to remember your dreams I mean all of them. [...]
[...] Miss Dineen told them they needn’t do so on a holiday, and the conversation among the three of them took off from there—culminating in Miss Dineen remembering that she knew us when Miss Callahan was alive, etc.—all of this after Carol and Fred had asked Miss Dineen if she knew us.
(These notes hardly do justice to the string of events that led to Carol and Fred meeting Miss Dineen—from the couple’s leaving Watkins Glen, motoring to Elmira, deciding upon how to find us, asking a policeman finally for directions to a book-store, going to the wrong bookstore—Rubin’s—just as Miss Dineen came out of the religious bookstore almost next door, Miss Dineen first directing them to 458 West Water, then remembering that we’d moved, etc. [...]
[...] One aspect not covered, and which I forgot to ask about, involved Rusty’s meeting with the president of Prentice-Hall; will try to remember to ask about this next session.
Remember—you two were involved, with your probabilities and free will. [...]
Now: For Ruburt, I want him to remember the idea of effortlessness, because with the best of intentions he has been trying too hard. (Pause.) I want him to remember that relaxation is one of creativity’s greatest champions — not its enemy. [...] Remind him that it is safe to express his natural (underlined) rhythms, to remember the natural person. [...]
[...] Now, however, she remembered that just before the session she’d picked up the idea that Seth would mention effortlessness in connection with her own situation.)
[...] Remembered faces of those you have known, and remembered scenes from other existences, form the nucleus of your experience; the forms that you bring, seemingly out of nothing, into actuality. [...]
[...] Let yourself remember.
(“I don’t remember it.”)
If you meet your father in your dreams, he will be quite transformed from the person that you know, so you need not fear remembering your dreams on that account.
[...] In the out-of-body state this rose remembers all the out-of-body experiences it has had, but when it comes back to the body it forgets them all. It is not necessary that you remember, but if you want to remember, then indeed you can. [...]
Now, some of you also help others and do not remember when you awaken. [...]
[...] Bill said he could not remember his dream. [...] He also remembered a green rowboat that was anchored out in front of the house. [...]
(This statement took me by surprise, until I remembered that in the 63rd session, June 17, 1964, page 159, Seth had given a date of Sept. [...]
[...] She remembered the blocking; she was, she said, afraid she would make a mistake—especially in the beginning of the session. [...]
(Bill did say he remembered another kind of boat there, some kind of barge and derrick craft. [...]
lord let me remember how it was
when i nudged my skin
against the touch of each new morning
and bounded through
the thick thought-forests
that stretched between dawn and noon,
when like magic my lunch was put before me.
lord let me remember how it was
when i was so new
that i thought i was part of the morning.
lord let me remember how it was
when i nuzzled the air in the morning
and thought i could wiggle a distant leaf
just as i moved my own ears and toes.
i thought that i caused rain to fall
just as the tears from my own eyes
wet my cheeks,
and that my thoughts turned into clouds
that circled the top of my head.
If you have remembered only unpleasant dreams in the past, you may have built up a block against recalling any dreams at all. [...] She gave herself the proper suggestions each night but had the greatest difficulty in remembering even one dream. “Maybe you really don’t want to remember any,” I said.
People who have always remembered many of their dreams may be less than impressed with the idea of recording dream activities, but others for whom sleep means oblivion will find dream recall a fascinating endeavor and the variety of dream acts almost astonishing. [...] As we discovered later, it is the effort required to remember dreams, and the resulting stretching of consciousness that finally opens up dream reality.
12
Dream Recall: How to Remember Your Dreams
[...] Before you fall to sleep at night, give yourself this suggestion: “I can remember my dreams and write them down in the morning.”