Results 61 to 80 of 1102 for stemmed:word
[...] When I write my own book, you will read it word by word...and so shall you all, ...and then, there will be tests. [...]
[...] These are not words signifying nothing. [...] There is a reality behind my words and this reality is yours—you have only to pursue it. [...]
[...] You must not just listen to my words but realize not only that you are more than your ego, but that you can perceive more than your ego perceives. [...]
[...] It is somewhat like having to disentangle a particular word from a strong emotional association. I experience patterns made up of concepts, and you use words in associations.
Ruburt wants to know where the words are coming from. [...]
It is true that the difference is beyond words, that is the sense apparatus that you are trying to use, is much different than the outer apparatus with which you are familiar. [...]
In the first place, later we will use a different word than perception, which is somewhat misleading.
The word fluent is the word that bothers me, and I do not know to what you refer. I am not sure of your meaning of the word fluent in that particular context.
[...] It developed that during the exchange with Seth Jane had thought I used the word fluid, instead of fluent. To me however the two words had the same implication in this instance.
[...] The error is in one word; not fluent but “inner.” [...] For some reason the word was either mistaken or transposed, I do not know. [...]
[...] I am familiar with the change when I visit you, and Ruburt, who is not aware consciously of which word will follow another, did not know the intention behind the greeting. [...]
[...] And so you are in the process of reuniting yourself, and discovering what the word “humanity” means. You are finding out the meaning of individuality, which is a far more important word than you realize, and when you understand that meaning, then your own individuality will express itself in its natural form. Regardless of what words are put upon your experience in terms of sexual roles, you will be a full human being. [...]
[...] After we talked a bit, I deduced that Seth/Jane had been trying for the word “Stonehenge,” meaning the ancient Druidic stone monoliths arranged in a circle in England, etc. Jane then said this was the word Seth had been trying to get her to say. She didn’t know why it didn’t come out while in trance, since she knows the word and what it stands for.)
(Seth paused; Jane frowned as though groping for a word.)
(“Yes?” I thought I probably knew the word Seth/Jane was looking for, but I didn’t have time to think and write notes.)
[...] Keep that word ‘trust’ in mind.”
(4:03.) In other words, they do not trust the energy of their own lives. [...]
[...] “It’s almost like instantly sensing a new tall structure, only it’s made of words.”
He just told you that when he begins to speak for me he senses an entire tall structure of words, and unhesitatingly he lets that structure form (intently). The same is true with his ability to move and walk; the more he trusts his energy, the more his spontaneity forms its own beautiful order that results in the spontaneous physical art of walking — and he is indeed well along the way. [...]
[...] I have never completely trusted the written word half as much as I trust the spoken word, and on your plane it is difficult to trust either. [...] Somehow the sound of the words is rather pleasant. But seeing myself transformed more or less into plain black and white words on a page of paper seems dull and uninteresting. [...]
Because Ruburt deals in words it is easy for me to communicate in this manner. That is, Ruburt automatically translates inner data given by me into coherent, valid and faithful camouflage patterns, into words. [...]
[...] She also realized she was aware of what she dictated to me during the session, although not the word-for-word order of the material. [...]
(Jane also now realized that she had at her command the full contents of the 60th session, although again not in word-for-word order. [...]
(Jane said some subjective feelings are difficult to put into words. [...]
I will add a word here, only to remind you once more to read those sessions regarding inner vitality and the initial appearance of physical matter, for that discussion will help you with this one.
[...] The dashes indicate either two words used together, or one word separated by a silence in the middle.
He taught himself the hard way, in other words, out of a lack of faith and expectation.
There will be another development, or new word, about a recent development concerning his book, possibly next week. [...]
—at the thought of taking one person’s word as standing for absolute truth. Hence his discomfort in taking dictation of even a simple letter that must be transcribed in faithful replica to the words and ideas of another.
[...] It might be added here that out of a whole page of strings of letters, there were no instances of accidental spellings of words—not even short words like to, as, but, is, on, etc. [...]
[...] Taking down someone else’s words, verbatim, is to Ruburt, because of his own creative ability an inferior position.
The one exception here would be taking down verbatim the words of someone who Ruburt was convinced had superior creative ability or knowledge.
[...] Surely you must know that even the words feeling or emotion are at best symbols to describe something else, and this something else comes extremely close to your mental enzymes.
[...] In other words the mental enzymes not only produce action in the material world but become the action. [...]
[...] In your plane action is the main word of importance.
[...] I must still respect many like frameworks in my own plane, but my understanding of them renders them less opaque—and that is a poor word—all the time.
[...] You listen to the words and that is all, but the power behind the words, and the power behind the voice, is emotional power and emotional energy and it represents, again, energy that is within each of you and there is no need to be afraid of it. [...]
I get the feelings, though the words escaped me, and to the feelings I agree. [...]
[...] You cannot divorce it from your own sense of reality and I use therefore the word “love” without the embarrassment that some of you, quite privately, ascribe to it. [...]
[...] In other words, you must accept the emotional self, not superficially, not idealistically, but as it now exists. [...]
[...] eyes closed.) These interlaces (word repeated at my request) referred to earlier operations as carriers of information—information that is triggered by your own needs at any given time. [...]
[...] (Repeating some words.)
That is the material I referred to as being not verbal necessarily—carried by the words in other than usual fashions. [...]
[...] I have used the word multidimensional often, and you see I mean it quite literally, for your reality exists not only in terms of reincarnational existences but also in the probable realities mentioned earlier.
Instead of paints, pigments, words, musical notes, the creators begin to experiment with dimensions of actuality, imparting knowledge in as many forms as possible — and I do not mean physical forms. [...]
Such an art is impossible to describe in words. [...]
[...] Unfortunately, the words fail to describe many of the basics that I would have you understand. [...]
[...] They are means of recognition that stand for something else, a reality; signs that stand for words, spoken before the birth of words; words imprinted in molecules; words that were imprinted in other ways before the birth of molecules; and yet (to class members) words that echo within your own individual psyches. In one way or another these words, like pebbles, are left along the beach of your [collective] reality.
[...] For this patience, employed in conjuring up thoughts and images through words, was objectively and subjectively quite different in quality from that which I was so used to using in producing painted images. I could feel my mind and abilities, using either words or pictures, stretch as a result.
[...] As you do so you will be able to sense your own completed version, and any word that does not fit will be instantly sensed, while another will at once slip to mind.
[...] But in one way or another … those words continue to be spoken, whether through these lips, or through the sound of leaves, or through the invisible music of your own cells. [...]
My words, as I speak, operate in many ways. [...] As the meaning for the words, that meanings that you understand, as the electromagnetic realities that speed out from Ruburt’s lips, and all of these things you register and understand. [...] On the one hand, I know that you are traveling these inroads, even as I know that as I speak some of you understand me and use my words simply as maps to lead you to undiscovered lands, and others hear merely the words. For those of you who hear only the words I am sorry. [...]
You put those words in your own mouth. [...]
(I had to ask Jane to repeat the last few words of the above paragraph. [...] This strong but not especially deep voice persisted, but did drop somewhat in volume after a couple of hundred words. [...]
[...] It is difficult for me to have to string out this material in words, and for you to record it. [...]
And here a word about this material. [...]
We will not always be hampered by the need of words. [...]
There is also, within, that you do not want to be one of the masses of men and women who experience the same phenomena, in other words, the orgasm—that you want to be apart, and different, and indeed spontaneous and a rebel and walk along in your own way. There is behind it all also, a great embarrassment that you must share such a sensation with others, if you experienced it within marriage—it is expected within marriage—people looking at you, in other words, if you are married can say that you do it.
[...] There is a connection here between you when you know so much about hypnosis (“and yet not successful in going into it yourself”—I lost these words—and am paraphrasing Seth here).
Forget the word orgasm. [...]
Forget the word orgasm. [...]