Results 1 to 20 of 126 for stemmed:scene

TPS5 Jane’s Dream Sunday, June 3, Nap. shadows Scene hide shackles storage

Scene 1—At an art gallery supposed to be the Arnot. A woman is in trouble from taking drugs. I talk to her sympathetically, give a terrific dissertation on art, its therapeutic qualities, and use as a natural high. Lots of people around.

Scene 2—Office of large corporation. On phone a man makes appointment to take me to dinner to discuss giving me an excellent position but I can’t hear him properly and got to another office to check time, etc. I’m in line for a great job… walk with other women thinking how amazed Rob will be if I take it or get it… and that it would be good for me to mix with people for a change. I haven’t said anything about being a writer… they might figure I don’t need the work… think that it’s full-time though and briefly wonder how I could handle that with writing.

Scene 3—These same women, myself, and at least one man are hiding though I don’t remember why. We’re in a large storage building. Some men, maybe police, come in and we hide in the shadows; a door beside is going to open so we get down and drag ourselves on our bellies to another door at the end of the room to hide in the shadows. The man with us may have his hands in shackles or something; I have to help him climb over some walls. As we move toward door shadows, almost same, I see one woman carrying Rob’s landscape (the one in our bedroom) pushing it ahead of her. When we almost have it made one woman says to hell with it, she can’t take it another minute; she’s just going to stand up and show herself no matter what. I’m furious at her. Rob wakens me.

TPS5 Session 858 (Deleted Portion) June 4, 1979 art scene dedication gallery vocational

[...] The art dream (of June 3), as I call it, has its opening scene in an art gallery, which represents a conventionalized view of art. [...]

In the first scene in the gallery he is explaining with some eloquence the mental and physical benefits of art, and its action as providing “a natural high.” [...]

The second scene takes place in a large office building that represents the world and its usual pursuits. [...]

NotP Chapter 3: Session 764, January 26, 1976 modes exercises scenes associations daydream

When you have done this, ask yourself which scene evokes the strongest emotional response. [...] Certain dynamics are involved here, so that such a scene will also attract elements from other scenes. Allow those other scenes to break up, then. The main picture will attract elements from all of the others, until you end up with an entirely different picture — one made up of many of the smaller scenes, but united in an entirely new fashion. [...]

[...] First of all, see them as a series of scenes, arranged in small squares, to be viewed as you would, say, a comic-book page. [...]

(10:58.) Sometime as you walk down a street, pretend that you are seeing the same scene from the sky in an airplane, yourself included. [...]

TPS6 Jane’s Silver Dream Fragment February 14, 1981 silver silverware servants sterling serviceable

I awakened toward morning with my body quite sore and with the memory of an earlier dream scene. [...]

[...] The earlier religious scene suggests that I was appalled to find my abilities leading me anywhere within the realm of religious ideas at all to start with. [...]

UR2 Section 5: Session 720 November 13, 1974 shadows hallucinations oak cast camera

Dictation (whispering). Now, if you take a physical camera with you today and snap pictures as you go about your chores, walk, or talk with friends, then you will have preserved scenes from the day’s activities.

[...] The photographer in the dream world, though, will find an entirely different situation, for there consciousness can capture scenes from entirely different times as easily as the waking photographer can take pictures of different places. [...]

The same applies in the dream state; but there, the shadows of your thoughts may be projected outward into scenes of darkest desolation. [...]

UR1 Section 1: Session 687 March 4, 1974 probable neurological shadowy geese race

Take any remembered scene from your own past. [...] Sometime, immediately or after a few tries, a particular portion of the scene will become gray or shadowy. [...]

[...] Instead of any of those things, the imagined dialogue — if there is any — may suddenly change from the dialogue that you remember; or the entire scene and action may quickly alter. Any of these occurrences can be hints that you are beginning to glimpse the probable variations of the particular scene or action. [...]

[...] (Pause.) This method is even more effective if you choose from your past a scene in which a choice was involved that was important to you.

TPS5 Jane’s Dream Saturday, June 2 Asner dumpy Lou Ed disruptive

Recall brief last scene again. [...]

TPS2 Deleted Session November 26, 1973 discordant Masters peace portrait painting

[...] Some of the Old Masters were adept at painting scenes of violence, warfare, sagas, with dark and dreary atmospheres, yet each so filled at the same time with life and vitality that the canvases themselves seemed alive. [...]

[...] When you look at the great world picture before you in space and time, look at it as you would a multidimensional worldscape, painted by some artist who was all of the great masters in one; and behind the scenes of destruction and conflict, feel the great energy that in itself denies the destruction that is in that case so cleverly depicted.

ECS4 ESP Class Session, September 21, 1971 pyramid Martin Whatever autumn myths

[...] Whatever scenes come, follow them. [...]

[...] Whatever scene you see, remember it. [...]

[...] Turn and return again through to the pyramid and the channel, back through to the rooms and the scenes and past people. [...]

SDPC Part Three: Chapter 17 Nicoll Sue bitter probable Carl

[...] I know that now the scene will not happen this Thanksgiving in physical reality — that I have helped choose another more positive one. The scene ends. [...]

I half waken and then drift into a recurring scene from an old childhood dream: There is a killer fog behind us, and we must get down a snowy path to home before the fog gets us. [...] I go back into the snow scene. [...]

Suddenly I am yanked away from this scene, and Carl [Sue’s husband] and I are sitting in a large room with Jane as Seth. [...]

TPS5 Jane’s Dream Friday, June 1 soapy bathtub shore sudsy water

All I recall is final scene. [...]

TPS3 Session 756 (Deleted Portion) September 22, 1975 appropriate bogeyman inappropriate unsafe agitated

Dramas are built around hypotheses or scenes, and these scenes in physical life determine your experience. [...]

TES4 Session 186 September 8, 1965 stamps depicted test tavern diverted

[...] Perhaps a scene. [...]

[...] Stamp #2 depicts a scene in Kansas. [...]

(No water scene appears specifically on any stamp, or a child. [...]

SDPC Part One: Chapter 3 cobbler Sarah village wires bullets

[...] An uneasy December followed — bitter and dreary and discouraging on the national scene — and locally the weather was dark, with snow piled high. [...]

For me, the episode was amazingly vivid, the scenes clear and bright in my mind’s eye. [...]

[...] I would think that I was telling Rob about each scene as I saw it, but then he would ask a question, and I’d realize that I hadn’t said a word for some time.

TES7 My Evaluation of Gallagher Nassau Tests Gallaghers uncheckable nassau disagreement evaluation

[...] I had whole scenes before my eyes and some freedom of movement within them. [...]

TES6 Session 278 August 8, 1966 Leonard postmark stamp geometrical postage

(“An oval shape or scene.” [...] The scene on the front of the postcard consists almost entirely of oval components in the abstract: The sea spray, the clouds, even the rocks in the foreground. We believe this applies since Seth used the word scene in the data.

[...] An oval shape or scene.

[...] I saw no connection, but as soon as she saw the scene on the postcard used as object, Jane said fur had been a reference to the white foamy water spray and surf. [...]

SS Part Two: Chapter 20: Session 580, April 12, 1971 unending inhumanity suffering portray misdirection

[...] A great painting of a battle scene, for example, may show the ability of the artist as he projects in all its appalling drama the inhuman and yet all-too-human conditions of war. [...]

The artist who paints such a scene may do so for several reasons: because he hopes through portraying such inhumanity to awaken people to its consequences, to make them quail and change their ways; because he is himself in such a state of disease and turmoil that he directs his abilities in that particular manner; or because he is fascinated with the problem of destruction and creativity, and of using creativity to portray destruction.

TES9 Session 444 October 30, 1968 Holzer Fodor robed Mossman Nandor

[...] There was evidently strong telepathic/clairvoyant communication with another student when this occurred, for as Ruburt, Jane, while conscious, described a certain ancient scene set about a campfire; Jane and her student, also female, described the same scene. Jane saw the scene clearly, and among other facts realized that in this ancient time both she and the student were existing as males in that life. [...]

(I seemed to have the ability to shift my focus so as to see more of the scene. [...]

TES1 Session 7 December 13, 1963 blueprint da Yes undecided Gratis

(Last night, while sitting quietly for a moment after my day’s work, I saw again briefly the scene of the 6th session-Ruburt on the path. Then, it was followed by a short scene of a sailboat on sparkling blue water. [...]

UR1 Section 3: Session 699 May 22, 1974 photograph dream snapshots waking picture

[...] It might be easier here, perhaps, if you compare a scene from a dream with a scene in a photograph. [...] A dream scene might portray just such a motif, however.

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