Results 1 to 20 of 322 for stemmed:deepli
When he moved into this apartment the idea was “If Rob will not use the money then at least I will have more space.” He felt deeply misunderstood despite any ideas of logic or reason in conventional terms. He felt deeply that you should have left years ago, that your own intuition should have told you this. He was at a loss to understand why you did not, or why it seemed (underlined) you would insist upon a job on his part before you would leave.
He railed, again, about the psychic work, but this, while important, was deeply recognized as a part of his nature, an extension of it long before he consciously accepted it. Do you follow me?
You did lose communication for some time. He did not know if you were really satisfied with your work or not. If you were, then he did not see why you did not take the chance. If you were not then all the more reason why you should take it, to give yourself the additional time. He felt deeply disloyal to think that you should be doing something you had obviously decided not to do as yet.
The overly conscientious self is also deeply emotional, though in Ruburt it often hides under the guise of intellectualism. [...] In actuality the overly conscientious self has not been educated, and is deeply terrified that Ruburt is taking false gods.
[...] At the same time the whole personality is deeply committed and has always been, to such a psychic examination of existence. [...]
[...] It deeply distrusted the spontaneity allowed in such jobs.
[...] He felt deeply betrayed particularly by Father Doran, and resolved never to betray others in such a way.
[...] The people that write to him as the result of his books often bothered him deeply, for he thinks that they look to him as you would to a prophet. [...]
When Venice’s friend committed suicide some time ago, this affected him deeply, for a session had been held and it did not stop the suicide. [...]
[...] Humorously:) Censored material: in a matter of days you effectively helped Ruburt to largely overcome a problem that had bothered him deeply—the bathroom situation.
You took one small but important area—one that bothered him deeply, and frightened him; narrowed it down, so to speak, pointed out a simple but effective method of operation to be followed. [...]
[...] In your own way then translate the acceleration and see where it brings you and how far your consciousness can go with it before you become dizzy and how far back you can look and how far forward and how far and how deeply into yourself you can look. And when you look deeply into yourself where does this lead you? [...]
[...] She was deeply attached to the other brother. [...] To her the buttons almost seemed to have consciousness, and when she was alone she would take out her boxes of buttons and hold some in her hands, and remember the garments to which they belonged, and when she had worn them, and how the weather had been; and she lived in a present that was deeply colored by the past.
[...] She deeply reacted against violence, and was overly sensitive.
[...] Violence frightened her deeply.
[...] My saying that such a course of bodily harm is pointless is beside the point, when one considers how deeply they have ruled Jane for many years. [...] When I saw that she was giving up on those movements after a couple of months, I took it as another sign of resistance on the part of deeply entrenched parts of the personality.
[...] The deepest needs and desires of the personality had to be aroused and deeply involved in an endeavor that would allow the personality to use its full strength in a focused and emotionally intense manner.
[...] I told him sessions ago that the poetic and psychic portions of his personality were deeply united, and now looking over his old records he knows that I was correct.
This means of course that deeply felt hope must be sardonically examined, that deeply buried faith must be stated with parried thrusts, and to that extent the paper speaks for a concentrated portion of your population so that our Jim Poett, who is a poet at heart, must appear in the slightly worn cloak of the skeptic. [...]
He reacts personally and deeply when you get too far in the direction toward noncontact. [...]
[...] He is deeply offended and outraged at any “invasion” into his own territory—the student who goes into his room at break, or the woman peeking at his notebook. [...]
He relates warmly to others, but he relates deeply only to you. [...]