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Do You Know who You Are? | Bob Proctor

23m 5s4,752 palabras659 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPCIÓN COMPLETA

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You went to, you attended seminars and you said

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your reason there was to learn more about yourself.

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[Bob] Yeah.

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My experience has been people attend seminars

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especially self-development seminars to look for the answer.

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They wanna know, what is it out there I can learn

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so that I can be more successful?

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That wasn't your motivation?

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No, no, oddly enough.

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And, I think probably you're right.

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I think that's what most people are looking for.

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I think they're looking for an answer

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outside of themself and they're never going to find it.

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I think by this time I realized it was something in me.

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I met a man here in Toronto.

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He was the one that originally got me involved

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in studying this, Ray Stanford.

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And, he told me if I didn't like the results I was getting

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in my life, that I was going to have to change me

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because they were my results.

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And, he said, if you're gonna change you,

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you're gonna have to find out something about yourself.

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And, that seemed to make sense.

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I don't think it was an earth-shattering idea.

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It wouldn't give anybody a brain hernia,

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but it made a hell of a lot of sense to me.

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So, I started to study myself.

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I found most people don't know who they are.

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They really don't.

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What do you mean?

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I mean, I know my name, I know my age, I know where I live.

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What else is there-- - Yeah that's not you though.

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That's just it. - I know what size (mumbles).

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If you ask the average person who they are,

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they'll give you their name.

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They'll say I'm Bob Proctor, but I'm not.

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Bob and Proctor are two words.

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My parents gave them to me.

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They're called names but it's not me, it's my name.

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Then somebody'll say well this is me,

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but this isn't me either, it's my body.

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Like you never phone down here to the studio

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and say, "Body won't be in today, it's sick."

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[Tom] (chuckling) Okay.

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You know we don't say am hand or am leg.

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We say my hand, my leg, my body, my name.

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Who am I?

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Well that's an interesting question.

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And I believe if a person will start to study that

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and look for the answer, they'll find it.

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See, I think we live simultaneously

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on three planes of understanding.

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We're spiritual creatures, we have an intellect,

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and we live in physical bodies.

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Okay.

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But, because we lack awareness or understanding

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of who we are, we're totally locked into

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a physical world and we let things

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outside of us control us.

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95% of the population are reacting to life

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they're not really living at all.

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[Tom] Okay, and would you call that

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one of the barriers to success?

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Oh there's no question about it.

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I think there's two barriers.

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Success is a funny word.

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Nightingale had a great definition for it.

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He said, "A person's successful if they know where they are

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and they know where they're going,

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"nd they're progressively moving in that direction."

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He said that success was "the progressive realization

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"of a worthy ideal."

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Anyone that has a goal and they're moving towards it,

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they're successful.

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Most people think that you're successful

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if you have a lot of money.

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Quite often you have a lot of money if you're successful,

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but it isn't, I wouldn't say Mother Teresa

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has a lot of money, you know,

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but she's a pretty successful lady.

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So, it's--

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So, that barrier to success

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is reacting-- - Well there's

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a couple them. - Okay.

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I think there's two barriers.

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One is our conditioning, the conditioning

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that takes place in our subconscious mind

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from the time we're infants.

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All we can do is act and talk like the people around us.

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That's why we learn the language we learn.

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If there was 10 languages spoken in our home,

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we'd learn 10 languages without any trouble.

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There's usually one and that's the only one we ever learn

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and we grow older and we think,

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oh I couldn't learn another language.

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We could learn 100 if we wanted to.

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You can do anything.

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But, I think we're conditioned.

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We have a real strong conditioning

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usually with not some very good ideas.

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And, then that's the barrier that's inside us.

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The one that's outside of us is our environment.

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We have a tendency to act like everybody around us.

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And, if you think about this,

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it doesn't make a lot of sense.

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Because if you study statistics, 95% of the people

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live their entire life and never live the way

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they want to live.

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Did you know that 95% of the population in this country,

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let's say in North America.

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Okay.

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The richest continent in the history of the world.

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They all work productively, let's say for 40

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of their 65 years.

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Okay.

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And, they all end up with hardly any money.

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Well there's gotta be something wrong.

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So, there's not much--

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About 5% of the people end up

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financially comfortable or independent.

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Are you trying to depress us, Bob?

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'Cause that's--

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No, actually I think it's quite an exciting idea

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because you see the idea behind it is that anybody

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can win, anyone at all.

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But, if we start studying these statistics,

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I think we'll arrive at the conclusion,

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geez, I better start thinking for myself

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rather than follow everybody.

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Most people they get a job, they look around,

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they see how everybody else is doing their work,

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and they start doing it the same way.

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They should stop and think, I wonder if any of these people

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know what they're doing?

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You know, is there a better way to do it?

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But, don't we have a need to fit in?

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I mean, we don't wanna stand out,

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we don't wanna get fired, we don't wanna make waves.

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Exactly, exactly, just fall into line,

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you know, take a number, be like everybody around.

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You know, that'd be great in the animal kingdom,

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but human beings aren't supposed to live that way.

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I think we should make a few waves.

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We should maybe stand out, be different.

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Not for the sake of being different.

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[Tom] Okay.

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But, because we are different.

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We all think different thoughts

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and I believe we should start to think

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and build images in our mind of what we'd like to do

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and then set out and do it.

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Okay let me--

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Emerson did that, Edison did that, Marconi did that,

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Samuel Morris did that.

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Buckminister Fuller did that.

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We could go on and on and on and on.

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[Tom] Okay.

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They were different, they stood out,

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they made a few waves.

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Okay, you started with you say,

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you started with a search for yourself,

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to try to find our more about yourself.

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And, you were somewhat successful along the way.

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Well, I didn't start it like that in the beginning.

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I started that I wanted to earn a lot of money.

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I figured if I had enough money I was gonna

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cure all my problems.

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I found that that wasn't true.

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I earned a fair amount of problems, or money

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and I seemed to have more problems.

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But, I, after working at this

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for a few years I decided that the real answer

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is get to know yourself a little better.

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[Tom] Okay.

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And, I don't think you have to go off

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in the Himalayas and become a guru to do that.

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Okay, what did you do to learn about yourself?

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You said you went around to as many seminars as you could.

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I attended seminars.

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I went and listened to different speakers

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who taught something about the mind.

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I think the answer's in our mind.

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If we all start studying

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and trying to understand our mind.

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Okay let me get back to you if I can.

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What did you learn about Bob Proctor during that study?

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Well, I learned that the biggest part of me,

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you'll never see.

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It's non-physical.

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And, what you see here in the physical body

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is nothing but the physical manifestation

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of the higher side of my personality.

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And, of course that's true with you

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and Nancy that's on the camera.

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It's true of everyone.

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And, what we have to study, I think,

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is how does this non-physical part of my mind work?

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What happens when I think?

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Where do thoughts come from?

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How was this chair built?

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