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Session 391: The Note, the Ghost, and the Table-Pounding Party
Welcome back! Today we’re getting cozy and a little bit spooky as we dive into Session 391 from The Early Sessions Book 8 of the Seth Material, recorded on January 13, 1968. This isn't your average "Seth speaks through Jane" session; this is Jane going solo, trying to help a friend, Jerry Kramerick, solve a family mystery. Grab a drink—maybe it's "tip-up time"—and let's see what the "survival personalities" had to say.
The Mystery of the Cleaner’s Note
The whole afternoon kicked off because Jerry found a mysterious note stapled to her father’s clothes after they came back from the cleaners. The weird part? Jerry had searched those pockets thoroughly before sending them out. The note was from her stepmother, Billie, who had been dead since 1965. Jane decided to see if she could pick up some "impressions" without her usual partner, Seth.
Psychic Hits and Vintage Vibes
Jane slipped into a light trance and started dropping some seriously specific details that had Jerry’s jaw on the floor. Here are the highlights of what Jane "picked up":
Things Get Rowdy: The Billie Show
The vibe shifted from "polite psychic reading" to "full-blown family argument" real quick. Jane started channeling Billie’s fiery, swear-heavy personality. At one point, Jane slammed her fist on the table so hard the teacups literally jumped.
According to the record, Jane’s voice and mannerisms became a dead ringer for Billie, who was known for being dominant and having a "quick, sputtering voice."
Key Quotes from the Session:
The Verdict
By the end of the session, Jane was rubbing her right hip—the exact spot where Billie used to have pain. Jerry was totally convinced that Jane had actually been "controlled" by Billie, especially during the table-pounding sequence where Jane used Billie's exact phrases like "guts and gumption" and "that's no lie."
Jane later admitted that she felt controlled by a "vivid, angry vital woman" and had to purposefully step back to maintain her own awareness.
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This summary is based on the Seth Material, and we give all the credit to the New Awareness Network. If you want to dive deeper into the mysteries of personality and survival after death, you really should study the Seth Material books for yourself.
Visit the source: sethcenter.com/the-early-sessions.
By C33Session 391: The Note, the Ghost, and the Table-Pounding Party
Welcome back! Today we’re getting cozy and a little bit spooky as we dive into Session 391 from The Early Sessions Book 8 of the Seth Material, recorded on January 13, 1968. This isn't your average "Seth speaks through Jane" session; this is Jane going solo, trying to help a friend, Jerry Kramerick, solve a family mystery. Grab a drink—maybe it's "tip-up time"—and let's see what the "survival personalities" had to say.
The Mystery of the Cleaner’s Note
The whole afternoon kicked off because Jerry found a mysterious note stapled to her father’s clothes after they came back from the cleaners. The weird part? Jerry had searched those pockets thoroughly before sending them out. The note was from her stepmother, Billie, who had been dead since 1965. Jane decided to see if she could pick up some "impressions" without her usual partner, Seth.
Psychic Hits and Vintage Vibes
Jane slipped into a light trance and started dropping some seriously specific details that had Jerry’s jaw on the floor. Here are the highlights of what Jane "picked up":
Things Get Rowdy: The Billie Show
The vibe shifted from "polite psychic reading" to "full-blown family argument" real quick. Jane started channeling Billie’s fiery, swear-heavy personality. At one point, Jane slammed her fist on the table so hard the teacups literally jumped.
According to the record, Jane’s voice and mannerisms became a dead ringer for Billie, who was known for being dominant and having a "quick, sputtering voice."
Key Quotes from the Session:
The Verdict
By the end of the session, Jane was rubbing her right hip—the exact spot where Billie used to have pain. Jerry was totally convinced that Jane had actually been "controlled" by Billie, especially during the table-pounding sequence where Jane used Billie's exact phrases like "guts and gumption" and "that's no lie."
Jane later admitted that she felt controlled by a "vivid, angry vital woman" and had to purposefully step back to maintain her own awareness.
---
This summary is based on the Seth Material, and we give all the credit to the New Awareness Network. If you want to dive deeper into the mysteries of personality and survival after death, you really should study the Seth Material books for yourself.
Visit the source: sethcenter.com/the-early-sessions.