Results 341 to 360 of 1110 for stemmed:suggest
(She added that her situation this evening was like the one mentioned by her in the material presented in Appendix 5. She was open to my suggestions: If I prompted her, she could go right into a session and get the information. [...]
[...] There was a reason why there was no session last evening, and if you listen to the conversation, and if you understand the nature of suggestion as thoroughly as you should and must, then you will understand the reason. [...]
[...] Several members of class remarked Edgar and Maria might be giving their patients negative suggestions. [...]
You are in a trance state now, and you have all hypnotized yourselves into believing that this is the only reality and your constant suggestions continue the emotion, and that is the basis of your physical reality. [...]
Later work has convinced me that psychic phenomena do not simply appear because we want them to, or as the result of suggestion alone. [...] I’ve also known incidents since, when groups of highly suggestible people with little critical sense have gathered in dark rooms expecting all kinds of apparitions—and nothing happened at all.
[...] Bill dropped by on the evening of January 2, 1964, and on the spur of the moment I suggested that the three of us give it a try.
[...] We argued back and forth as to whether or not suggestion could have been responsible, but we knew that this could not explain half of what happened. [...]
It was in this session that Seth suggested we hold sessions twice a week, saying that a schedule was far better than spasmodic activity. [...]
I suggest a short break and I will continue, though very briefly.
[...] All windows in the house should be, as Ruburt suggested, opened; let the hilltop air blow through. [...]
I would strongly suggest a garden, in which both of you work. [...]
I would suggest, if you purchase the house, that you often take your meals in a dining room. [...]
[...] I suggest therefore that you hold six weeks of sessions as always at your regular time, then feel free to miss a week with my blessing and your own, and then begin another six-week schedule.
[...] But all in all the regularity should be maintained, and the suggestion I have given will allow both schedule and freedom from schedule. [...]
[...] Remember my suggestion given earlier, and positively enjoy a week’s vacation after six weeks of session.
[...] Jane said no conscious suggestions, that she was aware of, had been involved today or this evening. [...]
I suggest however that you continue your own prayer periods, as you have been doing them. [...]
[...] When he feels his full enthusiasm bubbling up in his work he will not need to give himself suggestions that he will feel well in the morning.
[...] Once more I wrote the good doctor, suggesting that he not spare my feelings in case the data was just wrong. [...] Again he wrote of his continuing interest and suggested we keep on. [...]
“One of the attractions of your portrait of me is that it automatically suggests an unseen audience to whom I appear to be speaking. [...] The figure manages to suggest the universe of men and the world that holds them, yet nowhere do these appear.
Here are a few excerpts from that session: “In a portrait,” Seth said, “do the same exercise as given earlier: [that is], imagine the individual as the center of all life, so that when the painting is completed, it automatically suggests the whole universe of which the individual is part. [...]
“In the smallest detail they managed to suggest the reality of the spiritual universe of which that detail was a part and through which the energy of the universe spoke. [...]
Any therapist can also follow through by making such suggestions, thus gaining the client’s cooperation at the same time by letting the individual choose the time period for which such a decision will be delayed.
All of the suggestions given here will also help in lesser situations, in ordinary bouts of worry, stress, or poor health. [...]
[...] Eyes felt softer, etc., Then we went to take Billy to the vet’s; on the way my eyes did funny things; odd sensations involving balance I think—both of these in the car; I asked for help from “divine parent of my being,” and repeated the suggestions Seth gave me; trying not to be worried. [...]
[...] It was because of distrust of this spontaneous self that he accepted your suggestions so readily and without argument. [...]
(“How about the cod liver oil suggestion?” [by the chiropractor.])
[...] The fear of spontaneity is what made him so passive in following suggestions of yours, to which he did not agree.
[...] I will endeavor to contact Ruburt as you suggest.
[...] I suggested to Jane that she cut her cigarette consumption in half, but she refused, even if this would be a form of natural therapy.
[...] In this session I haven’t written about the negative suggestions Dr. K. gave Jane in the hospital concerning the finger: ulceration, losing the joint, etc.)
[...] The suggestions should also be retained. [...] The “as if” game will increase the suggestions’ worth by dissipating habitual areas of thought that combat them.
[...] We will give you some suggestions on this when I am finished.
The mistrust of mobility, or fear that it could be taken away, was built up also, with other reasons given in the sessions, simply through the suggestion over the years of living with someone who was not mobile. [...]