Seth Speaks is not exactly the type of book to just breeze through. In fact, it's really the type of book that I read and underline, making comments in the margins as I go along.
One of my favorite all-time ever horoscopes mentioned something to the tune of the Universe being a divine comedy in which it was conspiring to give me exactly what I need.
Seth revealed this thought to me again, and I wonder if the author of that horoscope read
Seth Speaks, too. Perhaps this concept is as old as the Universe itself, and my guess is that the latter is probably true.
From Seth Speaks:
"When one has been born and has died many times, expecting extinction with each death, and when this experience is followed by the realization that existence still continues, then a sense of the divine comedy enters in.
"We are beginning to learn the creative joy of play. I believe, for example, that all creativity and consciousness is born in the quality of play, as opposed to work, in the quickened intuitional spontaneity that I see as a constant through all my own existences, and in the experience of those I know.
"I communicate with your dimension, for example, not by wiling myself to your level of reality, but by imagining myself there. All of my deaths would have been adventures had I realized what I know now. On the one hand you take life too seriously, and on the other you do not take playful existence seriously enough."
Interestingly enough, I picked up a movie called "Fearless," with Jeff Bridges, at the ASU library. Can't believe I have never seen it before. An early 90s flick it appears.
If you can get your hands on it, watch it.
It has an interesting twist at the end that I would love to discuss. It's relative.
BTW, I wrote a new
Dissertation Blog, and it does include some ideas from
Seth Speaks, and more.