| DISMISSED...................1 | |
| other times hardly remembered, actively dismissed, but surely to return to | W 183 L 1 (394) |
| DISMISSES...................3 | |
| looks at its foundation and dismisses it. But YOU who cannot | T 13 F 7 (350) |
| to correction as the truth dismisses them as causeless. Now are | W 138 L 9 (302) |
| idea so mad that sanity dismisses it at once. 8 | W 187 L 7 (411) |
| DISMISSING..................2 | |
| you have invested with fear, dismissing each one by telling yourself | W 47 L 4 (83) |
| involvement or concern as possible, dismissing them by telling yourself: This | W 65 L 5 (120) |
| DISOBEY.....................1 | |
| His laws, although you can disobey them. Yet if you do | T 8 E 1 (195) |
| DISOBEYING..................1 | |
| AND YOU HAVE DONE SO. Disobeying Gods Will is meaningful | T 7 J 6 (182) |
| DISORDER....................4 | |
| Irrational thought is a thought DISORDER. God Himself orders your thought | T 5 G 10 (119) |
| AND WANT TO. Every thought disorder is attended by guilt at | T 5 G 10 (119) |
| the remedy for a thought disorder, and a remedy whose efficacy | T 5 G 11 (119) |
| Having given up its thought disorder, the proper ordering of thought | T 5 H 1 (120) |
| DISORDERED..................4 | |
| RECOGNIZES it. Yet in your disordered state, you are NOT afraid | T 12 C 1 (315) |
| everything is disordered, and where what is within | T 12 E 4 (323) |
| has been removed from the disordered mind that thought it WAS | T 13 I 2 (360) |
| clean of strange desires and disordered wishes. We restore to them | W 188 L 8 (415) |
| DISORDERS...................1 | |
| Fear distorts thinking, and therefore DISorders thought. T 5 I | T 5 I 1 (124) |
| DISORGANIZED................3 | |
| relationship may even become quite disorganized. And yet, the former organization | T 17 F 5 (468) |
| anything. The reason for this disorganized approach is evident. The ego | T 17 G 2 (472) |
| part which is constantly distracted, disorganized, and highly uncertain. 2 | W 49 L 1 (86) |
| DISORIENTATION..............3 | |
| 28) real disorientation, accompanied by fear, guilt, and | T 2 B 26 (28) |
| which a sense of actual disorientation seems to occur. But fear | T 16 G 6 (445) |
| of reference. The period of disorientation, which precedes the actual transition | T 16 G 7 (446) |
| DISOWN......................3 | |
| worthiness. The mind will inevitably disown its miscreations which, without the | T 2 F 5 (45) |
| referring, what you project you disown, and therefore DO NOT BELIEVE | T 6 C 2 (134) |
| truth about myself. Now I disown self-concepts and deceits and lies | W 248 L 1 (492) |
| DISOWNED....................1 | |
| 1. I have disowned the truth. Now let me | W 248 L 1 (492) |
| DISOWNING...................1 | |
| me be as faithful in disowning falsity. Whatever suffers is not | W 248 L 1 (492) |
| DISOWNS.....................1 | |
| part of themselves. No one disowns something he regards as a | T 4 C 4 (77) |
| DISPASSIONATELY.............2 | |
| them come and go as dispassionately as possible. Do not dwell | W 31 L 3 (52) |
| look upon this cruel god dispassionately. And we note that though | W 170 L 7 (378) |
| DISPEL......................26 | |
| BECAUSE he is lovable. They dispel illusions about him, and perceive | T 1 B 33 (7) |
| logical, since this idea DOES dispel the ego. Fear of dissolution | T 4 F 2 (89) |
| on the light THEMSELVES to dispel them. T 6 F | T 6 F 2 (144) |
| light of YOUR understanding would dispel it. T 7 G | T 7 G 9 (171) |
| judgments. The only way to dispel illusions is to withdraw ALL | T 7 H 5 (175) |
| in it, so you can dispel it by withdrawing belief FROM | T 7 I 7 (179) |
| you are not asked to dispel them alone. You are merely | T 8 A 3 (188) |
| it, but my light must dispel it because of what it | T 8 E 2 (195) |
| real, he then attempts to dispel its --- | T 9 D 4 (228) |
| have the lamp that will dispel it, and since you realize | T 10 F 1 (265) |
| And how else can one dispel illusions EXCEPT by looking at | T 10 F 2 (265) |
| upon darkness through light MUST dispel it. Let us begin this | T 10 F 3 (265) |
| see, you NEED reality to dispel your fears. T 10 | T 10 H 18 (279) |
| s interpretation of fear DOES dispel it, for the AWARENESS of | T 11 C 3 (283) |
| J 14 You cannot dispel guilt by making it real | T 11 J 14 (310) |
| the light the light will dispel it. And then no dark | T 12 B 7 (314) |
| show it to you and dispel it WITHOUT the need for | T 12 C 1 (315) |
| Holy Spirit seeks not to dispel reality. If GUILT were real | T 13 D 6 (342) |
| purpose of Atonement is to dispel illusions, not to establish them | T 13 D 6 (342) |
| light of love will not dispel, unless it is concealed from | T 14 C 2 (367) |
| offering Christs forgiveness to dispel their faith in sin. | T 22 E 4 (618) |
| seems to be disturbing, quickly dispel the illusion of fear by | W 93 L 11 (182) |
| dream these words will not dispel; no thought of sin and | W 162 L 2 (354) |
| God created you. These words dispel the night, and darkness is | W 162 L 6 (355) |
| s return each morning to dispel the night, your truly given | W 186 L 11 (408) |
| illusion. Is it harder to dispel the belief of the insane | M 9 A 5 M(26) |
| DISPELLED...................14 | |
| that ALL such thinking be dispelled that we must be very | T 3 C 4 (48) |
| illusions about the Sonship are dispelled together, as they were MADE | T 7 H 4 (174) |
| that its EFFECTS can be dispelled merely by denying their reality | T 10 F 2 (265) |
| ITS presence the ego is dispelled. T 12 B 3 | T 12 B 2 (313) |
| what madness sees must be dispelled by reason. Reason assures you | T 21 G 8 (596) |
| And let the darkness be dispelled by Him Who knows the | T 22 G 9 (623) |
| adored that strength may be dispelled, and darkness rule where God | W 92 L 4 (178) |
| to the truth, to be dispelled before the light of knowledge | W 280 W7 1 (528) |
| to them. So are they dispelled, not by the will of | M 6 D 3 M(21) |
| a fragile veil, so easily dispelled that it can last no | U 5 A 4 U(8) |
| dreams that they might be dispelled. And shares them still, to | U 6 A 4 U(10) |
| world. Now are its dreams dispelled in quiet rest. Now its | S 3 C 5 S(22) |
| oneness is his separate sense dispelled, and it was this that | S 3 D 4 S(24) |
| agony and loss has been dispelled forever. Do not think that | G 3 A 7 G(8) |
| DISPELLING..................5 | |
| you can BE alone, thus dispelling the idea of separation, and | T 7 I 9 (180) |
| the problem of this world. Dispelling it is salvation, and in | T 8 E 3 (195) |
| which it offers INSTEAD of dispelling it. The ego believes in | T 11 J 14 (310) |
| no power. And by NOT dispelling darkness he became afraid of | T 13 H 6 (355) |
| is a beginning step in dispelling the belief that your thoughts | W 16 L 1 (28) |
| DISPELS.....................4 | |
| only the truth. It thus dispels mans | T 1 B 31b (6) |
| overcome it. The Holy Spirit dispels it simply through the calm | T 11 J 15 (311) |
| is the dark His gift dispels By giving me His strength | W 111 RIII 2 (231) |
| seen, healing is automatic. It dispels this meaningless illusion by the | W 136 L 1 (291) |
| DISPENSE....................1 | |
| up as God created you, dispense with idols and remember Him | S 1 A 3 S(1) |
| DISPERSIONS.................1 | |
| they established differences, divisions, cleavages, dispersions, and all the other concepts | T 2 B 21 (26) |
| DISPIRITED..................4 | |
| be egocentric IS to be dispirited, but to be self-centered in | T 4 A 1 (70) |
| for me to inspire the dispirited, or to stabilize the unstable | T 4 E 13 (88) |
| means to make joyous. The dispirited are depressed because they believe | T 7 E 6 (162) |
| you are tempted to be dispirited by the thought of how | T 15 B 10 (389) |
| DISPIRITEDLY................1 | |
| place it? Whenever you wake dispiritedly, it was NOT of the | T 8 I 4 (212) |
| DISPIRITING.................3 | |
| affirming it, and are thus dispiriting yourself. Do not embark on | T 4 A 2 (70) |
| have given up this voluntary dispiriting, you will see how your | T 4 E 7 (87) |
| Inspiration is the opposite of dispiriting, and therefore means to make | T 7 E 6 (162) |
| DISPLACE....................2 | |
| MAKES them pure. If you displace YOUR guilt upon them, the | T 13 D 2 (341) |
| suffer guilt WILL attempt to displace it because they DO believe | T 13 D 3 (341) |
| DISPLACED...................3 | |
| or you would not have displaced the guilt onto what you | T 13 D 1 (341) |
| you yet realize. You have displaced your guilt to your bodies | T 18 G 2 (495) |
| first illusion, which must be displaced before another thought system can | M 7 A 1 M(34) |
| DISPLACEMENT................3 | |
| not. The doubtful service of displacement is to hide the REAL | T 13 D 1 (341) |
| perception THAT IT IS INSANE. Displacement always is maintained by the | T 13 D 1 (341) |
| a lesson in a terrible displacement, and a fear so devastating | T 31 E 4 (851) |