EPISODE · Mar 26, 2022 · 19 MIN
Many Ways to Die
from Neville On Fire · host Ed
Many ways to die to oneself are considered.IntroductionI did not post in the last 2 weeks. Discussion of illness. 1. Planet in its orbit - proximity to and remoteness from conscious source, as a test.2. Subtlety, refinement of state is desirable.3. Put off the old mental conversations.4. Helpful image of the serpent. 5. Blake: died many times since. Maurice Nicoll explains the seeming flatness and nothing to fall back on.6. Sedona Method: releasing; letting go.7. Where does the method lead? From having to wanting to being. Premature, artificial development is never a good thing (Alexander).Neville’s natural progression: accepting desire and wishes as expressions of one’s state.8. Summary: Need for a careful consideration of one’s worldview, one’s definite chief aim, and honesty with oneself about level of development. KEY QUOTE“There seems to be nothing to fall back on. What we actually lose is the ordinary feeling of ourselves.” (Nicoll, M. Living Time p. 75)RESOURCESNeville, Seedtime and Harvest, Chapter Seven.Sedona Method Release Technique 1992, series of 8 videosRepeated:Maurice Nicoll (1952) Living Time and the Integration of the Lifemp3 download - Neville Mental DietsAlexander, Dr. Rolf (1956) Creative Realism
What this episode covers
Many ways to die to oneself are considered.IntroductionI did not post in the last 2 weeks. Discussion of illness. 1. Planet in its orbit - proximity to and remoteness from conscious source, as a test.2. Subtlety, refinement of state is desirable.3. Put off the old mental conversations.4. Helpful image of the serpent. 5. Blake: died many times since. Maurice Nicoll explains the seeming flatness and nothing to fall back on.6. Sedona Method: releasing; letting go.7. Where does the method lead? From having to wanting to being. Premature, artificial development is never a good thing (Alexander).Neville’s natural progression: accepting desire and wishes as expressions of one’s state.8. Summary: Need for a careful consideration of one’s worldview, one’s definite chief aim, and honesty with oneself about level of development. KEY QUOTE“There seems to be nothing to fall back on. What we actually lose is the ordinary feeling of ourselves.” (Nicoll, M. Living Time p. 75)RESOURCESNeville, Seedtime and Harvest, Chapter Seven.Sedona Method Release Technique 1992, series of 8 videosRepeated:Maurice Nicoll (1952) Living Time and the Integration of the Lifemp3 download - Neville Mental DietsAlexander, Dr. Rolf (1956) Creative Realism
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Many Ways to Die
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