Results 441 to 460 of 1607 for stemmed:work
[...] Down the hall somewhere a woman was shouting periodically — a display that took a lot of work and energy after a few hours. [...]
[...] Each of his activities can indeed flow easily one into the other, and he should remind himself that the inner intelligence within him is indeed on its own always seeking his best interest, and always of itself working on his behalf.
[...] I worked on the budget. [...] With all of this activity, I’ve managed to get in just one-and-one-half hours of work on the preface for Dreams, during the last three days. [...]
(Sometimes I wonder if I’m supposed to work on Dreams these days at all—whether it may not be a project whose time is not yet for either Jane or me. [...]
(Before the session, we voiced the hope once more that Seth would at least comment on Jane’s latest experience involving book work in the sleep state. [...]
[...] In its own way, cellular comprehension includes a vast recognition of probabilities in your terms, and works with flashing manipulations in which these probabilities are contended with and responded to — and therefore altered.
[...] A good percentage of your problems can be worked out rather easily through the use of your imagination.
[...] Such work with the imagination acts as a trigger, however, drawing information to you from other levels of your greater reality, and concentrating it on the specific problem at hand. [...]
[...] His grandfather strongly influenced him, and to the grandfather only a man who worked for himself was independent. Only in his last ill year did he work for others. [...]
[...] When it becomes frantic of course it is a sign that the technique is not working.
[...] I can tell you that our work and the stability of our sessions has been of great aid in keeping the symptoms under some control. [...]
[...] You are both quite lucky, in that in your main work you can deal directly with the ideal. [...] The creative artist is always involved in the expression of the ideal, and his work expresses that ideal as best he can.
[...] “The best” idealist is a practical one—someone who realizes that most men like to work with specifics. [...]
[...] On the other hand, given our present work orientations the sessions would have to happen sometime during the week—at least twice—and it didn’t seem reasonable to think that Jane would have every one of those on the spontaneous spur of the moment. [...]
(Pause.) Ruburt has felt too responsible to develop his psychic abilities, to produce another “psychically inspired” work of his own. [...]
(Long pause at 10:38.) The earlier ones saw the two of you as apart from society’s inner workings—not divorced, now, from society—but you had both pursued policies of not following society’s mores. [...]
You may be interested in hearing some information about him, for he is working with art, painting, in terms of therapy. He is not only working with patients and using art as a therapy for them, not only having them paint as therapy, you see, but he is also working on the idea that some paintings in themselves have a healing effect. [...]
[...] There would be nothing wrong in such a framework, providing the various subdivisions worked together well. The Jane personality as a whole in that case would still be integrated, various portions of it simply designated for different kinds of work and ability.
[...] There is instead not a working arrangement between various portions of one personality, but a working arrangement among many quite independent personalities. [...]
He was able to utilize unusually strong amounts of energy in our work of late, and will find his energy even more abundant and dependable in his writing, our work, and normal living. [...]
(Yesterday afternoon, November 28, while working in my studio in the back of our apartment, I had a vision of a painting. [...]
(The vision had one oddity—I stood at my desk working at something else when I became aware of it to my left. [...]
(“Now that I have conscious memory of seeing the vision, I’m wondering just how much this memory is going to influence my actual production of the work.”)
(The session began late this evening because of my own distractions with painting; I worked late, and needed a short rest. [...]
[...] It contains potentials unlimited, but it must work out its own identity and form its own worlds. [...]
(Here, unexpectedly, Seth referred to a large portrait I’ve been working on for the last month and the one that gave me so much trouble today. [...]
[...] Everything was working, but in a very restricted fashion as far as locomotion was concerned. [...]
Your pendulum work, your determination, and the sessions have aroused Ruburt’s determination to act physically, rather than to retreat, and your suggestions concerning safety are important. [...]
Your pendulum work is at the point where you are lulling fears, and in the process of dissolving them to a normal level. [...]
[...] Work on the feet progresses along with the knees, and all of that largely originated from the head/neck area.
[...] “Not only working with patients and using art as therapy, but working with the idea that some paintings in themselves have a healing effect.” [...]
[...] In this particular instance, compare the various portions of the whole self to the various members of a family: The man may work in the city. The woman may work at their home in the country. [...]
[...] He is an older man in his system of reality than Rob is in ours, and while he is engrossed in his painting, this interest is subordinated to his medical work.
[...] … He has been working on the drug himself, along with two others.
[...] The priests she saw while she was living with her mother hadn’t liked those works, and castigated her for writing them. [...] She refused to get a dispensation from the church so she could read certain works. [...]
(When I got to 330 today I found that the call light in Jane’s room hadn’t been working properly this morning, and now saw that it hung out of its fixture, half dismantled. [...]
[...] Now, he ordinarily moves about before he goes to work at his table, and takes less time to arrive here. [...]
Following your work so far with the book, Ruburt is learning to separate his body beliefs from his concepts of rockbed reality—to question them. [...]
[...] He is only now learning again the knack of consciously directing the body in the way he wants to—at a certain level, for what he is really learning to do is change the directions he has been giving it, for those worked very well.
[...] He and Ruburt have worked together, you see, on other occasions and also have known each other in some past lives. He knew you as a Sumari but he had not worked with you, in your terms, personally. They were closely involved, and in a work relationship, a highly personal work relationship. [...]
[...] This group, therefore, has always been involved in the kind of work in which you are now involved, and on a grand scale. [...] You work through many layers of reality at the same time. [...]
[...] You are well aware of any changes that occur as far as Ruburt’s own abilities are concerned, or any offshoots, say, from our sessions or work; and so though you were not here physically, you did indeed participate.
[...] The corner working space, any corner working space, pleases him, because it provides a place for the collection of psychic energy, and also serves as protection to his way of seeing things. It is too bad you cannot eat in your kitchen, but I believe something can be worked out with that arrangement as it exists.
Your working room should not be disturbed, that is you should have your own working room. [...]
[...] Ruburt’s book, Idea Construction, displayed for me the fact that he and I could work together. [...]
[...] They involve something entirely different, problems that they themselves have not worked out in the past.