The Early Sessions
Session 400: Creative Flow, Chill Vibes, and The Art of Letting Go This briefing dives into the cosmic yet surprisingly practical wisdom of Session 400 of The Early Sessions, Book 8 of the Seth Material, recorded on March 20, 1968. Before we get into the heavy lifting, just a heads-up: this podcast is distributed free of charge on all major platforms for educational purposes. Now, grab a drink, kick back, and let’s look at how Seth (channeled by Jane Roberts) tells everyone to stop trying so hard and just enjoy the ride. Ruburt’s Need to Relax (Jane’s Work Habits) Seth starts the session with some much-needed "take it easy" energy for Jane (whom he calls Ruburt). Apparently, Jane was being a bit of a workaholic, and Seth had to step in with some celestial career coaching. * Trust the Inner Self: Seth notes that Ruburt doesn’t need to spend 24 hours a day obsessing over work. Instead, he should "trust the inner self" and focus on the present moment, even during boring household chores. * The Joy of Chores: Seth suggests doing chores joyfully to give the mind a rest. If you're scrubbing a floor, be the best, happiest floor-scrubber in the universe. * The "Too-Much-Too-Soon" Trap: Seth jokes about Jane’s sudden urge to be perfect, noting she wants to "gallop down" the right track just to prove she’s changed. * Get a Hobby: To keep the conscious mind from getting too tangled in psychic matters, Seth recommends dancing, gardening, and painting. * Don't Be a Saint: In a humorous, emphatic delivery, Seth reminds Jane: "Now that he is ‘good,’ in quotes, he need not make a saint of himself overnight." The Psychology of the Artist (Rob’s Painting) The session shifts gears to analyze Rob’s (the notes-taker and Jane's husband) approach to art. Seth gets pretty deep here, linking Rob's technical style to his childhood and emotions. * Technical Ability as a Shield: Seth reveals that Rob’s high technical skill and "precise delineation" were actually protective mechanisms. Because his mother’s emotionalism was frightening, he used sharp lines to keep his feelings at bay. * Mastery via Realism: Recreating physical reality with "supernatural precision" gave Rob a sense of control over a world that felt emotionally unpredictable as a child. * The Vision Leads, The Technique Follows: Seth suggests a total vibe shift: let the inner vision suggest the form, rather than imposing a form on the vision. * Go Big or Go Home: To break free from the fear of "too much feeling," Seth encourages Rob to attempt larger works. * Portraits and Past Lives: In a fascinating tip for portrait artists, Seth suggests looking at a subject and trying to see them as they were in past lives to add "depth and dimension." * The Energy of an Apple: Realism isn't just the surface. Seth says: "Remember in your painting... the vibrating always changing reality within, say, the skin of the apple or the orange." Key Session Quotes * "He is on the right track, but now he wants to gallop down it at once, you see (more humor, eyes wide) to show us all that he has changed." * "He can afford to play. (Humor.) Now that he is ‘good,’ in quotes, he need not make a saint of himself overnight. (Emphatic.)" * "The lines also served to protect you from that which you were painting, and from the feeling involved. It allowed you to feel that you were capturing the subject, and to assure yourself that the subject was not capturing you." * "Realism is more than the surface of things." To study more, visit the source: sethcenter.com/the-early-sessions [https://sethcenter.com/the-early-sessions]
395 afleveringen
Reacties
0Wees de eerste die een reactie plaatst
Meld je nu aan en word lid van de The Early Sessions community!