Results 41 to 60 of 978 for stemmed:rememb
[...] Now give us a moment and listen to what is being said and to what is not being said and remember what I just told you. [...]
[...] But let you remember that the language and the sound and the noise are packages that have been parceled for you, but for you personally, tailored for you exactly according to your own purposes and needs. [...]
[...] In certain terms, and remembering what I told you earlier, in certain terms the Sumari language does exist, and in certain terms you know it well. [...]
Now, try to remember what I have said and try to tell our friend Ruburt when he returns. [...]
Now before I bid you a fond good evening let me remind you that those of you who are ready can meet in the out-of-body state and remember your experiences. [...]
[...] Remember however that there were also reasons having to do with past life experience, and that all of you chose these conditions.
[...] And remember that you also received many supportive impressions from your parents also.
[...] I remember the big book my father used to keep the record of the club members’ dues, etc. [...]
A remembered dream is a product of several things, but often it is your conscious interpretation of events that initially may have been quite different from your memory of them. To that extent the dream that you remember is a snapshot of a larger event, taken by your conscious mind. There are many kinds or varieties of dreams, some more and some less faithful to your memories of them — but as you remember a dream you automatically snatch certain portions of subjective events away from others, and try to “frame” these in space and time in ways that will make sense to your usual orientation. [...]
In usual circumstances you may remember the emotions that you felt at the time a picture of yourself was taken, and to some extent those emotions may show themselves in gestures or facial expression. [...]
In a way, one remembered dream can be compared to a psychological photograph, one picture that is not physically materialized, not frozen motion, not framed by either space or time; therefore many of those ingredients appear that are necessarily left out of any given moment of waking conscious activity.
(Jane and I of course clearly remembered the couple referred to by Seth in the above monologue. [...] I remember that she had seemed oddly intrigued by them, and that they had borne more than a little physical resemblance to us. [...]
[...] I remembered that we had today also received a Christmas card from the owners of the hotel where we had stopped at York Beach, Maine: Ocean House.
[...] Remember, however, that they did exist; and having once existed could reappear with less impetus than the original. [...]
[...] I would tell Jane to remember her own idea construction, for part of the answer is certainly there. [...]
[...] I couldn’t remember when I’d had such a good time! Then I remembered that I had to return by noon to get Rob’s lunch. [...]
[...] While she remembered the dream clearly and saw its instant results, the information was not given to the conscious self (not even in the dream drama) but to other layers more intimately concerned with body-mind mechanisms. [...]
[...] Indeed, as I hurried down the hallway I seemed to remember other such apartments also.
[...] The embellishments are added after the dream is completed, just before the point when you remember it on a conscious level. [...]
[...] You will remember your own root dreams much more clearly simply because you are familiar, now, with root assumptions, and therefore freer to divest yourself of them within the dream situation.
You must remember also that greater context in which you live. [...]
[...] You must always remember that the self is not static, but a living gestalt of experience. [...]
I have a suggestion, and it is that you mentally speak to what I will call “the basic creative self”—and remember, these are terms. [...]
[...] Did he remember enough of it to interpret it correctly?”
[...] You can remember last year, and to some extent recall the past years of your lives. It appears to you that your present consciousness wanders backward into the past, until finally you can remember no longer—and on a conscious level, at least, you must take the very event of your birth under secondhanded evidence. [...]
“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.”
[...] Neither Jane nor I remembered hearing of, or experiencing, what I’ll call double dreaming. [...]
[...] Jane and I have known Sue since 1965, yet as far as any of us could remember [and for whatever reasons], the subject of double dreaming had never been discussed among us.
[...] I wondered what connection, if any, might exist between the capacity to have [and/or to remember] more than one dream at a time, and those “portions of the brain now not nearly utilized.”
[...] You could not at this point remember both dreams, because the physical brain apparatus could not handle the simultaneous data. [...]
[...] She well remembered the young man who gracefully assisted her off the banister in the second dream. [...] She remembers the fact that they were all smiling, and their smooth olive skins.
(Remembering her success in clairvoyantly tuning in on Bill Gallagher as he made his business errands on the evening of October 8, Jane decided to try the same thing with John on Tuesday. [...]
(“I don’t remember that.”)
No matter what anyone said, I was determined to remember any specific material I could—names, street signs, or route numbers. [...] We chatted and he pointed out places of interest in the city even while he warned me that I wouldn’t be able to remember them.
“But this fact is Ruburt’s safeguard in his out-of-body travels—as long as he remembers it. [...]
[...] Sometimes I’ve remembered the dreams, sometimes not, but I’ve always awakened refreshed and renewed, and the effects last. [...]
One reason, I think, that dreams seem so chaotic and meaningless at times is simply that we only remember dim fragments of them and forget the unifying factors. [...]
He should remember to recognize resentment when he feels it, and then to realize that the resentment can be dismissed, can fall away from him. [...]
[...] “When we danced one night I had a headache—do you remember?
“There was a fountain with an apple on it—do you remember?” (Long pause.) Something about a missal or prayer book, with dates, black, and a connection with a grandfather.
In your dimension it is as if events, remembered events, were like pieces of furniture, all arranged in one room, in a given order. [...]
[...] Remember he is to trust the inner self. [...] He must remember to focus within the present. [...]
[...] You have freed yourself to some considerable extent already, but you must remember to give your vision its own freedom, and then follow it.
[...] Remember in your painting the relationship of one object to another, not in terms of space necessarily, the interrelationship of the vitality that forms the objects; the vibrating always changing reality within, say, the skin of the apple or the orange, the quite living consciousness within the molecules that make up what seems to be the solid surface of the fruits’ skin.