sue

1 result for (heading:"for session 739" AND stemmed:sue)

UR2 Appendix 27: (For Session 739) 8/21 (38%) Grunaargh Gutenberg movable beefy Sue
– The "Unknown" Reality: Volume Two
– © 2012 Laurel Davies-Butts
– Appendix 27: Sue Watkins’s Material on the Grunaargh Family of Consciousness
– (For Session 739)

[... 1 paragraph ...]

(Jane’s ESP class for Tuesday evening, February 25, took place the day after the 739th session was held, and was her last one before we began preparing for our move to the hill house. Sue Watkins was present. During class I read aloud Seth’s material from the 738th session on the Grunaargh family of consciousness,1 which Sue had tuned in to during the 598th session for November 24, 1971. After class, Sue told us that she believed she’d been associated with the Grunaargh family — in Europe — through printing processes dating from the 1400’s, or possibly somewhat earlier. Since Sue herself is a Sumari, like Jane and me, I asked her to write an account of her feelings, thinking it would furnish a good example of one person’s emotional and intellectual involvement with a family of consciousness other than their own — and yes, of their reincarnational memories of those activities.

(Within the week Sue came through with the following paper, offered in a slightly abridged form and with a few annotations:)

[... 7 paragraphs ...]

(That was the end of Sue’s paper. She hasn’t read any history of printing per se. Actually, she told us, the material available to her from that time “could go on” indefinitely. She went on to answer my question:)

[... 2 paragraphs ...]

1. See the notes on Sue and the Grunaargh at the start of the 737th session.

2. And Sue is still involved with “the promulgation of printed material.” Now she’s co-editor of a weekly newspaper published in a small town north of Elmira. (Again, see the opening notes for Session 737.)

[... 2 paragraphs ...]

5. “My friend wanted nothing but plain, simple letters — nothing fancy,” Sue told Jane and me as we discussed her material. She drew some of the typefaces either designed or approved by that large, male, “earlier” creation of her whole self. In all cases the letters were of the cleanest simplicity, both for esthetic reasons and ease in carving and casting.

6. Sue could well be correct here. It’s believed that Johann Gutenberg (1400?–1468) was experimenting with movable metal type in Strasbourg, Germany, before 1448 — but there’s also possible evidence of printing from such type in Holland by 1430, for instance. (And typography itself was known, but not much used, in China and Korea in the 11th century.) In about 1448 Gutenberg became a citizen of Mainz, Germany, where he continued his work. By then, of course, the news about printing was spreading throughout Europe.

7. In Session 692 for Volume 1 of “Unknown” Reality see the material on Sue’s double dreams in the opening notes and in Note 2. Personally, at least, I see strong connections between the idea of double dreams and the kind of conscious reincarnational memory — or knowledge — detailed by Sue in this appendix.

Similar sessions

UR2 Section 6: Session 737 February 17, 1975 house family Foster Borledim Sayre
UR2 Section 6: Session 738 February 19, 1975 hill Foster house Avenue privacy
TPS1 Session 598 November 24, 1971 Sumari Rob guilds chant speakers
UR2 Section 6: Session 739 February 24, 1975 hill house trees neighborhood fireplace