Results 181 to 200 of 1102 for stemmed:word
Part of the difficulty lies in the use of words. [...]
[...] Unfortunately the words used to describe them are the same that must be used to describe currently held concepts. [...]
She is far more than an open channel in other words. [...]
[...] Therein Seth stated that Jane would receive “rather unexpected word concerning a book.”
The past is obviously built into words in terms of time. When you speak a given word you may not know the history of its changes through the years, yet you speak it perfectly. [...]
(“Is ‘life’ the word you want used there?” This is one of the few times I’ve interrupted Seth during his presentation of “Unknown” Reality.)
(And in answer to my second question of the evening, Seth told me that he wanted the word “formed” used in the last sentence, just as he’d given it.)
There are languages that have nothing to do with words — or with thoughts as you understand them. [...]
The word excess may be a poor one. Perhaps the word abundance of chemical energy would be more correct. [...]
[...] The last word above, which I took to be shoe, was not clearly pronounced by Jane. I asked for a repetition of the word, whereupon Jane, her eyes still closed, pointed at me rather emphatically.)
[...] The static was the coming together of the components before the words were formed from them.
In Philip’s case, in one way, my job was easier, since the words were not picked up from the outside. [...]
[...] In other words the actual sound effects, had you been listening, might have appeared as a loud whisper.
[...] She had never had the sensation before, and found it difficult to put into words.
[...] Note that the word “top” is penciled on the back of the Bristol; this was done by me after the experiment, but before Jane saw the objects, as will be shown later.
Also a dim connection with the word master. [...]
(Seth’s use of the word separated here is the closest he came to indicating two objects.
[...] See my indication of this by use of the word top on the back of the tracing on page 189. [...]
3. In Note 2 for Session 688, I quoted Seth briefly on the meaning he attached to the word “camouflage” (in 1970). [...]
“Camouflage” became a familiar word to us in those early sessions, and we thought it an excellent one for Seth’s purposes — but rather oddly, except for using it once in a while in recent years, he’s largely dropped it from his vocabulary.
In other words, a dream allows the inner self to view itself within the spacious present. [...]
[...] First as intuition; in other words from his inner self as he sat down to write poetry, and in a dream the following night.
[...] I remember walking out to the living room where she writes her poetry, having finished my own work in my studio in the back of the apartment at about 9 PM; Jane’s first words were “Boy, have I got a great idea,” or to that effect. [...]
[...] Any individual on the physical level who has achieved great things has done so because his so-called conscious self was intuitively (and underline the word intuitively) aware of the selves of which he could not be consciously aware.
[...] Not that I could repeat him now, word for word….”
[...] At the time words were clearly distinguishable, though later he forgot what they said. [...] It shocked him because he is used to hearing my words from within his head — he had never before been aware of my voice as existing apart from him. [...]
In other words, there is in the psyche constant interaction between all of the stations, and marvelous, literally unlimited creativity — in which, in your terms, all actions in one station affect all others in the other stations.
[...] I do not speak alone to Ruburt and Joseph, for example, but my words go out to the world that you know. [...]
[...] This is not always the case, by any means, but when such a person does recover fully, and maintains good health, it is because beliefs, attitudes, and feelings have changed for the better, and because the person “has a heart” again, comma, in other words, because the patient himself has regained the will to live.
[...] In other words, “a love transplant” in the environment may work far better overall than a heart-transplant operation, or a bypass, or whatever; in such ways the heart is allowed to heal itself.
[...] The words that you speak, the acts that you perform, appear to take place in time, as a chair or table appears to take up space. [...]
(9:35.) Other assumptions accepted for the same reason include the idea that all perception comes through your physical senses; in other words, that all information comes from without, and that no information can come from within. [...]
[...] “Every so often I get a huge sweep of something that I can’t put into words; do you know what I mean? [...]
The word “result,” you see, automatically infers cause and effect — the cause happening before the effect, and this is simply one small example of the strength of such distortions, and of the inherent difficulties involved with verbal thought, for it always implies a single-line delineation.
[...] He is, in other words, a superlative hallucination As mentioned earlier, those who believe in a hell and assign themselves to it through their belief can indeed experience one, but certainly in nothing like eternal terms. [...]
[...] “Buried” is the word Seth wanted here; I questioned him to make sure.
[...] They believed, however, that it was wrong to set words into written form, and so did not record them. [...]
(It is of interest here to note that a current Biblical reference work, in dealing with the very early history of Israel, has much to say about the “oral traditions” which preceded — and thus helped shape — the written word by many centuries. [...]
You may perceive the thought patterns as quickly flashing sentences or words that are usually seen within your mind or within the other mind, or as black letters that form words. Or you may hear the words and thoughts being expressed, or you may see the earlier mentioned “landscape” in which the thoughts symbolically form into a picture.