[acimlessons_list] Leap Year Day
Sue Roth
sue at circleofa.org
Tue Feb 28 19:34:37 EST 2012
Leap Year Day
In leap years, which have an extra day (February 29), there are several
options for how to handle the extra day. One option is simply to continue to
the next lesson, and thus finish the year's lessons a day early, or by
repeating the final lesson six times instead of the five times called for.
This has the effect of shifting all the lessons to a different day of the
calendar for the rest of the year. In these lesson notes, we have chosen not
to do this, so that the notes will be usable without change for any calendar
year.
Another option is simply to repeat the lesson for February 28 (Lesson 59),
or the one for March 1 (Lesson 60). Since these are already review lessons,
this does not seem particularly useful.
Three remaining possibilities are: 1) choose a favorite lesson, and do that
lesson for February 29; 2) take a day off, doing no particular practice; or
3) use the day to do a complete read-through of all ten lessons in Review I.
My recommendation is the third of these remaining possibilities, but you can
choose to do whatever you like. The reason I recommend doing a complete
read-through of Review I is that these ten lessons, taken together, provide
one of the clearest, most concise, and most readable summaries of the
thoughts that the first fifty lessons have been trying to teach us. Robert
Perry has said that this review is so plain and simply written that it ends
any question as to whether the author is capable of such clarity and
simplicity; it also gives us reason to think that, if other parts of the
Course such as the Text are written with greater complexity, there must be
good reason for it.
As the review instructions themselves state, "We are now emphasizing the
relationships among the first fifty of the ideas we have covered, and the
cohesiveness of the thought system to which they are leading you"
(W-pI.rI.In.6:4). What better way to gain a sense of the cohesiveness of the
thought system than to read through the entire review at one sitting?
There are twenty pages in Review I, but with so much white space that it
really amounts to little more than ten pages. The entire review can be read
aloud in under thirty minutes; I know because I have recorded it on tape.
(You might even want to try this yourself, if you have a tape recorder. I
found that listening to the entire review repeatedly as I drove to and from
work was a powerful learning tool.) Try to set aside a half hour some time
during the day, and read the whole thing at a single sitting. If you read
fast, then read it all two or three times. Try to focus, as the review
suggests, on the relationships between the ideas, and the cohesiveness of
the entire package.
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