Results 561 to 580 of 1864 for stemmed:time
The first time in some while that he has been open enough, and a sign of improvement. [...]
[...] When the bathroom is entirely completed with the exception of the ceiling perhaps, then the clothing should be washed, and preferably, this time at a different laundromat.
Now these changes have taken work, energy and time. [...]
You will indeed have the opportunity to help this Peter at a very important time in his life, and his meeting with you will change the direction of his life; both inspire him and set him firmly and safely on his feet.
[...] The events that you recognize as happening now are simply specific and objective, but the most minute element in any given moment’s experience is also symbolic of other events and other times.
Using emotion from the present, let him now imagine the event only defiantly, saying to hell with the feelings he had at that time about the dumb psychologist. [...]
At times he is standing straighter. [...]
[...] Neurologically he became familiar to some extent with the stuff beneath language, the inner rhythms unexpressed, and felt the odd connections that exist between words and your sense of time. [...] He will readjust “in no time.”
(Jane’s strange feelings were over by the time we went to bed. The next morning, though, she reported dream experiences that had been brilliantly clear at the time; in them she’d been “perceiving images or objects as language.”)
You will have to give us time… (Pause, one of many.) When a man’s consciousness, for example, blended with that of a tree, those data became “visual” for others to perceive. [...]
[...] The symbols of the words stand for your own or someone else’s experience, while protecting you or them from it at the same time.
[...] Each time he spoke to me, I saw him all alone, as on a large milky-white screen. [...] Each time he spoke, [...]
[...] I heard it distinctly and retained it for some time, yet by the time I began my notes for this experiment I had forgotten it.
I am still concerned with our discussion on matter, and will be for some time.
(Jane and I were both tired by session time. [...]
Three: Permanence is not a matter of time. [...]
Five: Stability in time-sequence is not a prerequisite requirement for an object, except as a root assumption within the physical universe.
[...] You may conclude that a given experience is the result merely of subconscious fabrications, simply because the time elements are obviously intermixed, or physical coherence or sequence is not maintained.
In doodles, in oils, in whatever suits you, and whatever suits you over a period of time, will find its own pattern. [...] You chose to spend a good amount of time dealing with form.
Van Gogh was true to his vision, which means he was true to the self he created for himself in that time, and so must you be. But you must also have faith in what you have done, for it was all done in faithful rendering of your view of reality (in quotes) “at any given time.” [...]
I have said this so many times —and I do realize it is difficult for you—but you cannot concentrate upon two things at once. [...] You do not spend time thinking that you have not used your abilities properly. [...]
[...] I could see through the day that they’d depressed her, however, so at session time when she mentioned them, I suggested we forget them. [...]
[...] He actually concentrated upon Seven, typed it creatively, walked several times a day, began to help with meals and with the house, and comparatively speaking you both had a fairly good week. [...]
[...] Ruburt was frightened of going, had a very difficult time with the stairs, but made them. [...]
[...] Jane said she was more dissociated this time. [...] At times I have been aware of a feeling very similar to the pleasant, easygoing state I first became acquainted with when Jane hypnotized me.
[...] At the time I happened to be alone in the living room, reading the paper, when the familiar thrilling swept over me to a fairly strong degree. I felt the residues of it for some time afterward. [...]
[...] This should not be too hard to understand since your own outer senses are often blocked so that you are not aware of any given stimulus at any given time. [...]
[...] I am placing these concepts within your time scheme because in your terms they were born out of it. But the fact is that all “time” is simultaneous.
[...] Your own body grows naturally and easily from its time of birth, not expecting resistance but taking its miraculous unfolding for granted; using all of itself with great, gracious, creatively aggressive abandon.
[...] All of this applies in degrees according to the species, and when I speak of conscious memory I am using words that are familiar to you — I mean a memory that can at any time look back through itself.
In a simultaneous time, punishment makes no sense. [...]
[...] During your life, any event must come through your creaturehood, with the built-in time recognition that is so largely a part of your neurological structure; so usually there is a lag, a lapse in time, during which your beliefs cause material actualization. [...]
[...] When you alter these conscious beliefs through effort, then a period of time is necessary while the structure learns to adjust to the new preferred situation. If beliefs are changed overnight, comparatively less time is required.
[...] As it took some time to build up your present image with its unhealthy aspects, so it may take time to change that picture. [...]
You can change the picture of your life at any time if only you realize that it is simply the one portrait of yourself that you have created from an unlimited amount of probable ones. [...]
[...] In actuality, her delivery had been so slow that at times she paced from one end of our living room to the other before giving voice to the next word. Thus it is seen that we had much different appreciations of the same amount of camouflage time. [...]
(Jane had no idea of the material for the session as the time for it approached. [...]
[...] I have said that they are not continuous, meaning that they are not strung out in your time, one before or after the other. [...]
Someone who sees him, a male, is not doing him good at this time. [...] The usual ego would have been much more serviceable however, for a longer period of time, had he not taken the drugs. [...]
[...] Jane had needed a rest for some time, after the long grind of sessions from late 1963.
The ego structure had been in danger for some time previous. [...]
[...] He should follow the rhythms of his own creativity without being overly concerned with the time. [...] You can see how your own creativity is emerging in the notes for Mass Events. Granted, you need time to write physically, but the basic creativity has its own ‘time.’
Today my wife was once again very much at ease for most of a day—so much so, in fact, that she slept several times. [...]
[...] He promised something Jane and I could really focus upon … an exciting yet thoughtful time of “work” and new information. [...]
Someday, in terms of time, there will be a thick book. [...]
[...] Your ideas of historic time impede my explanations. [...] Some such encounters intersected in space and time, but some did not. [...]
(9:54.) Time’s framework does not exist as you think it does. [...] So there are processes that work like associations, that can provide passageways through the universe’s otherwise time-structured ways. [...]
[...] (Long pause.) You exist in a kind of original interval—though, if you can, think of the word “interval” without the connotations of continuing time. [...]
Your stated universe emerged out of that kind of interval, emerging from a master event whose true nature remains uncaptured by your definitions—so there will be places in our book where I may say that an event known to you is true and untrue at the same time, or that it is both myth and fact. [...]
[...] As I touched her after speaking her name three times she came easily out of trance. But she had been far under, and looked a little disheveled, for she had been running her hands through her hair as she spoke, at times.
The whole personality has for a long time been waiting in another system of reality. [...]
There was a particular time when your father said goodbye to you. [...]
[...] Part of the time I was looking out of a window, and part of the time I stood on the roof or a porch with Bill, our backs pressed up against the side of the house. [...]
[...] At the same time I somehow knew there was a large underground rock ahead in the stream. [...] Still under water, I opened my eyes in plenty of time to see it ahead, and avoided hurting myself against its rough surface.
(To the best of my recall I was not very afraid at any time, yet was sad and concerned. [...] Part of the time I looked out of a window made up of many small panes of glass, and saw Jane on a swing outside the window. [...]
[...] Part of the time I was also outside of this brick room. [...] At no time in the dream did I actually see my father; I merely knew he was there, and involved.
[...] “You” live or exist in a larger framework of activity even while you live your life, and there is a rambunctious interplay between the yous in time and the you outside of time.
[...] Because of her concentration on that hook she hasn’t done much on her book of poetry, If We Live Again, since late February; and as I mentioned in the Preface for Dreams, she laid aside her third Seven novel, Oversoul Seven and the Museum of Time, in May 1979 when she began God of Jane. [...]
Reasoning, as you are familiar with it, is the result of mental or psychic processes functioning in a space-time context, and in a particular fashion. [...]
(Since I knew so little about the time of Christ, it’s taken me a while to do the extra reading necessary so that I could write appropriate session notes. [...]
[...] But we certainly didn’t expect Seth to continue the material he’d begun in his book relating to biblical times.)
(The Essene group generally known would be the Jewish sect in the Holy Land during the time of Christ, early in the first century. [...]
[...] At one time John attempted to join various divergent groups together as one brotherhood, but he failed. [...]
[...] Jane tried several times to get something on it recently, without success, then abruptly this afternoon it began to open up to her.
(At supper time this evening I explained a few problems of a technical nature, connected with my painting, to Jane. [...]
There are multitudinous themes interbound in any society at any given time, and they are all related. [...]
[...] They belonged to the (in quotes) “mass mind” of the time, therefore they did not have to feel apart and were accepted.
At the same time he thinks of the two of you together. [...] Any time you initiate a program to help him he is excited. [...]
[...] Besides, you took what were at times timely measures in physical terms—direct terms—to better your environment. [...]
[...] At one time he felt his emotional spontaneity was indeed admired by you and encouraged, and he blossomed. [...]
Everything he does is literal and symbolic at the same time. [...]