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== External links == |
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* [http://sethquotes.paradisenow.net/seth_excerpts_part_v.html Quotes from the Seth Books] |
* [http://sethquotes.paradisenow.net/seth_excerpts_part_v.html Quotes from the Seth Books] |
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Revision as of 13:20, 23 January 2009
Author | Jane Roberts |
---|---|
Language | English |
Genre | Novel |
Publisher | Amber Allen |
Publication date | May 1, 1995 |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | Print (Paperback) |
Pages | 560 pp |
ISBN | ISBN 1878424173 Parameter error in {{ISBNT}}: invalid character |
The Oversoul Seven Trilogy is a novel by psychic author Jane Roberts. It consists of the three previously published books The Education of Oversoul Seven, The Further Education of Oversoul Seven and Oversoul Seven and the Museum of Time.[1]
Oversoul Seven Trilogy is a work of non-fiction[citation needed] by Jane Roberts. The Seth Readings are a series of trance readings under taken in the 1970s which is provide and explanation from Seth (a multidimensional being Jane communicates with while in trance) on what it is to be human. For example: "The personality can dwell, and does dwell, in many worlds at once." Session 180, Page 212It. The Oversoul Seven Trilogy is the culmination of Seth's readings[citation needed]. It is distilling into a novelised format how Seth states human consciousness works.
Below is a quote from the final book in the series Oversoul Seven and the Museum of Time. In the story the consciousness which is Lydia goes through the process of rebirth into becoming the consciousness of Tweety. Whereas fascinated by the idea of being Tweety Lydia begs her guide (called Seven) for a teaching something that Tweety will remember and be able to draw on and use about the 'real world'. Lydia feels she does not wish to start from scratch and go through what she just experienced again, this time around she would like some guidelines. The result is the bedtime tale for Tweety below. In this 'tale' are the concepts and purposes behind the novels. In other words, this quote below is an example of the main philosophy behind the books and indeed Seth's readings.
For Tweety:
"Each life is charmed (Seven said), yours and everyone else's and you must never forget it. The instant you are born you're charmed, because life itself is a charm. each being is charmed into existence in whatever reality it finds itself, and given everything it needs to operate in the environment. Your body is charmed, too: It's a magic part of everything else; springing up from all the things you see about you. Atoms and molecules go singing through the miraculous air, forming themselves into rocks and trees and dogs and cats and people, too. you are magic. You charm the air so that it thickens into your body wherever you are.
When you want to move, you think the air ahead of you into becoming your body, and the air behind you then stops being your body...all very magical indeed. You move your arm just one inch to the right, and the air to the left one inch stops being part of your arm. But it all happens so quickly, your snatching of the air and making it turn into your body, that you never notice it at all, and take it quite for granted. Which is why it works so well, you see...
But your life is charmed. and there is a secret, very simple one. Really, it's not a secret. But you have to remember that your life is charmed. People who forget can't use their magic nearly as well as they did before, and they have tendency to get angry at those who can. So, often they pretend that there is no magic at all. Then they evolve great philosophies to prove it, which is itself magical, of course. But they can't see that, because they're so convinced that magic doesn't exist.
And many people forget how simple and natural magic is, so they evolve long theories, and methods that are supposed to make it work, when you and I know, and everyone else really knows, that magic happens by itself, because that's what magic is.
But people are also very creative...magic again!...so they make up gods of this and that, and realms and spheres and maps to chart out in advance where magic might be taking them so they don't get surprised, which is silly because magic goes where it wants to, which is everywhere. And when you try to map it out in advance, you really cut yourself short.
Because a characteristic of magic is that it automatically turns into whatever you want it to be. you create your own reality with it, so whatever maps you make are real. And if you forget what magic is, then you're liable to think that your map is the only real one, and all others are false. you get in a terrible bind, fighting over which way is right, which road or map, while all the time magic is what makes the maps. And a great variety of maps can appear in the twinkling of an eye!
Particularly when you grow up, many people will tell you that there is no magic. If you believe them, then you'll forget too, and you'll act as if you aren't charmed and bring unmagic into your into your life...which is magic too, you see, but magic that doesn't know itself. Then you'll create things that go with unmagic, like sorrow or sickness, and you'll have to deal with them at that level until you remember that your life is charmed again.
So in the meantime you'll feel nasty and unloved and angry, way beyond what is natural, and have to worry about sad or fearful emotions and what to do with them, when magically, you'd know: They'd just come and go exuberantly like summer storms. But anger and hate and sorrow are all magic too, and left alone, they'd lead you back to the knowledge that your life is charmed. Because hate is love looking for itself everyplace but where love is; and love is what you feel for yourself when you know that you are where you're supposed to be in the universe, and that you're lovely just because you are, and, of course, charmed.
Not only that, but you're also the magic maker; the inner living part of you that forms your life. But consciously you have to know this, accept and acknowledge it, and let the magic of yourself happen. That way, you're directing the magic of yourself.
But it's even more fun just to let the magic happen as it wants to, because it's your magic, and that way it keeps telling you more and more about your magical self. then the magic flows through you with unimpeded delight. If you keep saying. "I want it this way and no other," then you may be limiting your physical experience, because there's no doubt that your inner magical self knows more about your potentials then you do. And it will tell you quite clearly, if you only listen.
To many adults, all of this sounds too simple and unintellectual, because unfortunately many of them think that the mind is just something to say "no" with, and to keep out magic. Nothing could be further from the truth.
But if you use your mind to say no to magic, then it's like losing doors to your own charmed existence, and refusing to use the full power of your life.
Everyone works with magic, whether they realize it or not. Belifes are magic, too, you see. Many people think that one particular belif makes everything right; or makes magic happen. And as long as they believe that, they're all right for a while. But if they start doubting that belief, and don't find another one to replace it, then they think that they've lost their magic, or that life has. Instead, of course the magic is there all along.
But people love systems, so they use all kinds of beliefs...some of them quite handy...as aids. And they travel through belief systems , sometimes going to considerable trouble to do so, when all they really have to remember is that they are magic themselves, and their lives are charmed without their having to do anything about it at all.
And your conscious mind is magic, too. Its workings are mysterious and complicated, and simple and clear at once, like air is. your conscious mind looks out through your eyes, and knows parcels of air as its body, and smiles through cheeks and skin the same way that the moon shines through the wide skin of the heavens. See how clear and mysterious it all is? So, in a way, it's silly for the conscious mind to question magic, because - well, it's so magical itself.
But systems of magic are silly, too, and all of them are really based upon doubt. Magic is considered so tenuous that someone has to be at it all the time, making spells or paying someone else to do it. And the spells all have to be done just right, so people concentrate on how to do this spell or another. This gets very complicated, and many adult books deal with the subject.
But everything is a spell. Your words and thoughts are spells. Science is just another system that tries to disc over what certain spells cause certain effects. Usually, of course, scientists don't understand magic any more then priests do; and they all get caught up in their own complicated methods.
There isn't much basic difference between muttering a lot of different phrases or drawing magic circles to protect yourself against illness, and talking handfuls of pills given to you by doctors. Both methods work if you believe in them, though the practitioners of one method will never agree that the other way works at all, of course. And unfortunately, neither side really understands magic, which is behind all of the spells and methods and formulas.
Spells work if you believe in them; only you don't need spells at all. Everything happens by itself. You happen by yourself, so does the world. And the principle behind it all is magic. And magic is the beingness within and behind all things."
Editions
- Amber Allen ISBN 1878424173 Edition: Paperback; May 1, 1995[2]
References
- ^ "The Oversoul Seven Trilogy". Amber Allen. Retrieved 04 January 2009.
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(help) - ^ "The Oversoul Seven Trilogy, Publisher: Amber Allen". ISBNdb entry. Retrieved 2009-01-04.