SHSBC 61


SMOOTHNESS OF AUDITING

A lecture given on 21 September 1961

Thank you.
Well, this is 21 September, 1961 and you, I trust, are a little closer to
Clear - I trust. This is not grading a great probability about it because,
after all, something that's been going on for the last - I don't know, when
were you Clear last? About two hundred trillion years ago? Something like
that? Well, it's been going on for this long, I suppose you can suffer with
it a while longer. I suppose.
But unfortunately you won't have to and if your auditing would just
improve, why, you would find that it would be of mutual assistance for your
auditing to get better. So this is not a demand, you understand, but just a
pathetic little plea for your auditing to get better. I see Bob, here, is
taking that bad. Your auditing isn't perfect either. Yeah. Nor is mine.
Once in a blue moon, you find yourself taking your finger off your number.
But I will say this, I will say this, I take my finger off my number less
often than you do. And there are some of you going in the direction of
perfection to such a degree, however, that you find it difficult to achieve
mediocrity. Now, those are bitter words, but if you keep going in the
direction of perfection, absolute, never errored perfection, you're going
to miss that interstate known as mediocrity or even passable. Do you get
what I'm driving at?
The fellow who keeps hammering in there about perfection all the time - you
know, they've got to have - the auditor who sits there saying, "Well, I'm -
now I've got to get this acknowledgment across. Well, what am I going to
do? Well, let's see now, I had better get this order across to him. Now,
let's see, was that too Tone 40? No, I guess that wasn't too Tone 40.
Figure-figure" See, he isn't auditing the pc. See?
And I would rather you did a personalized job on the pc first and a
technical perfection second. You got the idea? And then all of a sudden
you'll get some horrendous win or other, you'll find out you can do it and
then you'll find out that it's very easy.
The wrong way to you can go at this, you know. You can say, "You have got
to be perfect before you can do anything for the pc," and you sit there
giving a session being too perfect and then nothing happens with the pc.
But of course, you aren't auditing the pc, you're auditing your own
auditing. You see how that can work?
No, audit the pc. The pc comes first. And all you want is a majority of
rightness, that's all. Just be right more often than you're wrong and
you'll get there. It's as simple as that. It's the percentages. Auditing -
the percentages are rather cruelly high. You have to be about 92 percent
right. Life you only have to be 51.
But what I tell you is true, that the pc forgives anything but no-auditing.
A pc doesn't forgive no-auditing. And if he has a problem that is bugging
him or bothering him or he's worried about something or other and the
auditor is mainly worried about the ritual, you've got the source of the
bulk of ARC breaks.
The auditor is so worried about the ritual; worried about, "Let's see, is
it the sensitivity knob that's supposed to move? Or let's see, I guess you
take the reading at the sens - you know the sensitivity knob on my meter
hasn't fallen ever since I started the Security Check."
And the auditor is so, so, so concerned about what he is doing, that the pc
never has an opportunity to impart the fact that he's worried as hell. The
pc never forgives it, see? Because the pc is sort of talking to a bundle of
technology, not a person. And with - the pc finds himself talking to a
bundle of technology, he goes out of session.
So auditing comes first, you see, and technology comes second. And that's
all very well for you to say, because it will be used here and there as an
excuse to do very horrible auditing. You see, you get me both ways. I mean,
I can't be right along all these lines, but the point is that the pc sits .
 . This kind of a situation is quite common in an auditing session: Pc
comes in, he's bubbling over with the fact that he's just been shot by a
howitzer and the auditor sets up the E-Meter and adjusts the cans and
adjusts the needle and tells him to sit there, and then starts in and asks
him if it's all right to begin a session and so on, and all it looks to the
pc like he's being denied auditing. That's all it looks to him, no matter
what the auditor's doing.
Pc meets you in the hall and says, "I've just been shot with a howitzer."
Well, don't say, "What do you know!" and then go through the technology of
starting a session. The pc is already - by imparting this horrendous piece
of information to you - has already announced the fact that he is already
in-session. It's obvious, because he's considering you the auditor and
that's all you're trying to achieve with your ritual - is to get him to
recognize you as the auditor. Well, if he's already done so, what the hell,
man? What the hell?
So he meets you in the hall and says, "I've just been shot by a howitzer."
And you say, "Well, where?" and "How was that?" and so on. And steering him
gently by the shoulders, steer him into the chair, and "Where was this
howitzer? Where did it hit you? Oh, yeah. Well, have howitzers ever been a
problem to you before? You may have a habit of being hit by howitzers in
some fashion." "All right, well, what do you know about that! And this
howitzer - how big was this howitzer?"
"Oh, 55 millimeter."
"Oh, well, that's a pretty big howitzer. All right. How do you feel about
that now?"
"Oh, I don't know, I feel a little better about it."
"Well, all right. Now, let's recall the first time you were ever hit by one
of these howitzers. Well, all right," and so forth. "All right, recall
another time. Okay. Now, how does it seem to you?"
"Well, it's better."
"All right, now you think we can get on with the session? All right now?"
"Yeah, I think we can."
"All right, what goals would you like to set now?"
Your rudiment was reversed end to, wasn't it? Rudiments should have been in
one place, but the pc was in-session. It's a delicate line between a Q and
A and that sort of thing, but you're liable to go right on through to the
end of the session and he never discovers that you've never started one.
You obviously start one the moment that you steered him toward the auditing
chair.
And the technical question comes up: When does the session start? Well, the
session starts when the pc recognizes that he has an auditor - that's when
a session starts. Pc recognizes that he has an auditor and goes into
session, that is it. See, he's obviously willing to talk to you as the
auditor, so he obviously is in-session. He's obviously interested in his
own case, so he obviously is in-session.
Now we're going to make difficulties, see, now we're going to adjust the
E-Meter cans and tighten up the leads and see whether or not the
sensitivity knob is moving properly and read the maker's name plate. Have
him get down on his knees - the way they'll be doing it a hundred years
from now, unless you disseminate properly - get down on his knees along
side of the chair and say a prayer to the - of the Auditor's Code before he
begins the session. Unless I get some of your terminals run out, that's
what'll happen. I'm being mean today, you know?
But anyway, just look it over. Look it over. What's a session? Your point
of view as a moment ago, why, your point of view of a session might have
been two people sitting in chairs and the auditor going through a routine
and ritual called Model Session, see? Well, you just alter that point of
view and you will be right. Some pcs practically don't get out of session;
so the main problem is trying to get them out of session overnight. See?
They are just in-session, bang, you see? Well the difficulty is ending the
session.
Now, the difficulty in starting a session always comes because the auditor
doesn't recognize the start of session. It always is in that category.
Something wrong here.
Now, there's two ways this can happen. The pc is leery of going into
session because he too often has been denied a session. All right, that's
good. We start one anyway and just run out his auditing - ARC break, that's
all. Something like that and you've got him started and you've got him
in-session. But in-sessionness is a technical condition. It has nothing to
do with placement of bodies or a ritual. It's whether or not the pc has
recognized his auditor and is willing to talk to the auditor. Of course,
that's part of recognizing the auditor. And is interested in his own case.
And that's what a session is.
And if you recognize that as a session, the suddenness with which a pc will
start talking to you in a streetcar or on a bus or something, is amazing.
Now, you have certain rights as an auditor and that is not to run a session
while travelling on the upper deck of a two-decker bus, you see, in areas
where one can't be heard or where you're going to get off at the next stop.
You see? You have certain rights about that sort of thing. But
nevertheless, confidence has been imposed on you - in you as an auditor.
And therefore you should make an appointment for the session. That's the
least thing you should do.
People start telling me their troubles and I haven't got time at that
moment to listen to them, I never say, "Well, I can't listen to your
troubles now." That'd be a silly thing to do, wouldn't it? "I'm sorry, I'm
too busy to hear all this tale of woe that you're giving me." A week later
we try to put the person in-session. Well, it has to start with an ARC
break. You got it?
So, it's always a good thing to have a card handy, like an HGC card or a
private practice card or something like that. And somebody starts telling
you their troubles, say, "Well now, it's very interesting" - but you're
going to get off at the next stop. And you say, "Right now, I've got to go.
And I'm very sorry but I've got to go see this friend and so forth. Now,
here is my card. And you make sure that you come and see me at two o'clock
next Tuesday."
Well, that's fine, you're still interested, aren't you? That's the proper
acknowledgment. You've acknowledged the person. You put him on wait, yes,
and so forth. He hadn't even realized that he's in-session. But the
mechanics of this will work. You'll find the mechanics of it will work. And
then if you do start auditing that person as a pc you haven't got to start
it with an ARC break.
The main problem is preventing sessions from happening in the wrong places.
If you only knew it and if you were very smooth as an auditor this would be
your main difficulty, is preventing sessions from occurring in the wrong
places where you can't audit, like the second deck of a double-decker bus.
So, you should give a little more thought to how you're going to get out of
a situation like that, rather than worrying all the time about how to get a
pc in-session. My difficulties is how do you get pcs out of session, not
how do you get them into session.
Now, that's how far a look you can have on the subject of the technical
practice of auditing. I mean, it can be totally the reverse to what you've
been worried about.
Not that you have a sympathetic face or anything, but somebody says, "Oh,
my," and you say - you knucklehead - you say, "What's wrong?" That's it.
You've had it, he goes into session. You're an auditor, you're a pro,
you've said the right thing and there he is in-session. Now, how are you
going to get him out of session without him running something, see?
It's a very natural thing for you to do - well go ahead and do it. But also
have the panacea for correcting it, which is to say, at least a point of
continuance of the session, or hand him to a substitute. Send him to the D
of P or something like that.
You say, "What is wrong?" You've started a session. How easy is it to start
a session? Well, it's much easier to start a session than you think. But if
you were working hard to start a session, you almost never start one. You
see how this would be?
Now, if you just work real hard and you fumble with the leads and you get
it all set and you adjust his chair and you get it all set up and so on and
the scenery is all okay and then - so on. You hang a sign on the door and
you clatter around one way or the other and you come back and you sit down
and you heave a long sigh and you say to him, "All right. Is it all right
with you if I begin this session now?" All right, that's fine. Now, that's
perfectly all right, providing the pc is not in-session. And then, of
course, that is totally wrong. There isn't a single thing you have done
that is right. Not a single action you've undertaken is right from the PC's
point of view, because you didn't handle the session as having started.
You probably didn't end your last session with this pc. Something like that
is it - what's in error. Pc still had a present time problem, pc still
interested in case, pc still back on the track and so forth. He's been
awake half the night thinking up the answers he's going to give you to the
auditing question tomorrow. He sees you; his instant response is to give
you twenty-five answers to the auditing question in rapid-fire order. Well,
attribute that to your prowess as an auditor. It isn't something to be
neglected. Pcs do this sort of thing - you're good, that's all. Either
you're bad at ending sessions, or you're good at being an auditor, one way
or the other. You have inspired confidence. Well, don't abuse the
confidence once you've inspired it.
How do you handle a situation like that? Well, you hear the pc out - not
all the way out. Now, there's a vast difference, in auditing, and letting a
pc talk and auditing a pc. And some of you have never differentiated
between these two things and you will waste a lot of auditing time. Letting
a pc talk has nothing to do with auditing a pc.
And if you sit there and you find out, in thinking back over sessions, that
pcs have been very verbose, they sure do talk, they run on and on and on -
and if you have had that kind of experience, chalk it up as a slight miss
on your part. Because you haven't audited him, you've let him talk.
I'll tell you a liability about letting a pc talk. They talk their
havingness down. You can get a pc to tell you your troubles - his troubles
and go on with an improper acknowledgment and just letting him run on and
on and on, and you'll see him go down from antagonism to anger, to fear, to
grief, to apathy. And you'll see him go right on down the Tone Scale.
That's because you're not auditing him; you're acting as a camouflaged
hole.
Now, auditing consists in directing the attention of the pc. And when a PC
is just sitting there talking - gab, gab, gab, gab, "And it's so on, so on.
And I did this and I did that and so forth and it's so on." Well, then
something is in error with your questions.
Do you realize that by the inteijection of questions into what he is
saying, you can direct his attention and throw him right back into session.
And you must be in some kind of a mental paralysis where you don't think of
a question to turn all this off. You're not trying to turn it off, you're
trying to direct it. And if you just sit there and let a pc gab, gab, gab,
gab, gab, talk, talk, talk, talk, talk and tell you all of his troubles and
so on, you're just asking him to run his havingness out the bottom. The way
to handle that situation is always interrogation. If the pc talks too much,
interrogate.
How do you interrogate? Well, your knowledge of the human mind should be
adequate now to the address of the situation. You can be far too abrupt
with your knowledge of the human mind. He is saying, "And my Instructor did
this and that and the other thing. And I was feeling so bad and, by George,
he came right in and dropped the bulletin right on my head," and so on and
so on. You say abruptly, "What did you do to the Instructor?" That shuts it
off effectively - creates a nice ARC break too. But in essence, you've got
to ask him what he did to the Instructor. But how smoothly can you do this?
And then that has to do with how smooth an auditor you are.
How smoothly can you ask him, "What'd you do to this Instructor that caused
all this?" See, there are various gradients by which you approach this:
"When was the first time you noticed there was some difficulty with this
Instructor?" He's only been able to tell you by this time about two
motivators - one motivator, two motivators, you see? But you can see by all
the signs that he's going to go on for the rest of the auditing session
telling you all the motivators. Well, that's not going to help him any. So
by the time you wrap around this and figure out just about what he is
talking about, you should be thinking of directing his attention. And when
a pc is talking too much, direct his attention.
Now, every once in a while, a pc goes off in a high spate of interest of
some kind or another and starts telling you about a gimmegahoojit or the
interplanetary customs of the Z People. Well, very often also, you're
interested. I had - some auditor here the other day said, "And he was
telling me about this spaceship" - and the auditor is report - doing the
reporting - "And he was telling me about this spaceship and how it really
operates, and you know if I'd had money right at that moment, I would have
bought one!"
Now, there's a pc doing a high degree of salesmanship, the auditor quite
interested. We're not talking about that kind of a situation, you see,
that's perfectly permissible. If you shut that off, you've had it.
No, we're talking about a different kind of yap, yap, yap, yap, yap, see?
We're talking about a pc who's complaining and going on and on and on. The
auditor that sits there and lets a pc go on and on and on and on and on
just isn't auditing. It's the auditor who isn't in-session. The pc's
willing to talk to the auditor but the auditor's not willing to direct the
attention of the pc.
And the most obvious type of question that could occur to you is just "When
did that trouble start?" He's saying, "And they shot me and they hanged me
and then they dragged me across the field and then they brought all the
cows over and made them stare at me." And he's going on and on and on in
this direction whammity-wham. And if somewhere along this line about the
time they shot him, you haven't asked, "When is the first time you had any
trouble of this character?" you're remiss. And your pc's going to run his
havingness down. See?
You should be in there directing the attention of the pc. All right, now,
let's go back to this first situation I announced. The pc meets you in the
hall and the pc's going gab, gab, gab, walla, walla, walla, telling you all
about it, see? Now, you've got the problem of getting him into the auditing
room, getting him into the chair, getting the E-Meter set up and getting it
all fixed up and so forth. What are you going to do? There is no pat
solution, except one - and that is direct the pc's attention. How do you
direct the pc's attention? If you direct it too savagely, you have operated
as a sudden shift of attention, have surprised the pc.
What are you going to say to the pc? Well, you're going to say to him
something that directs his attention. Not necessarily onto the mechanics of
the session - probably certainly not onto the mechanics of the session.
One of the tricks I use is put him in a comm lag and set him down. Ask him
a question he can't answer right away. That gives you time. See, there's
all kinds of things you can do. And they're all quite real and they're all
quite convincing and they're all quite effective. He meets you in the hall
and he says, "Gab, gab, gab, walla, walla, walla. And I thought up 365
answers to the auditing question which you were asking me last night. And
as a matter of fact I've got them all ready to give you and so forth and
we're all set and..."
Well, what the hell? You're not even in the auditing room. Now, what are
you going to do? Well you're going to do something to direct his attention.
That's what you're going to do. Now, how are you going to direct his
attention? Reprovingly? Surprisingly? Oh, no. Nothing like this. You're
going to say to him something on this order: "Uhm, by the way, did you have
a present time problem when we ended session yesterday?"
And he's going to say... And I'm going to get the E-Meter set up and going
to give him the cans, sit him down in the chair, put a sign on the door and
so forth. He's sitting there looking at it. "Yeah," he says, "Yes. It was
how to answer that auditing command."
And I say, "Well, all right, was that much of a problem?"
"Well, as a matter of fact I sure struggled with it until about last night
about nine o'clock or something like that, I happened to think that you
were asking - you were asking me about a man. And you know I didn't realize
before that you were asking me about a man."
"Well, what did you think I was asking? How did you define that?"
And he will say, "Well, I defined it, actually, as an island."
You say, "You did? Well now, how would you get those things to compare?"
Finish it all up and so forth, say, "All right, now what goals would you
like to set for this session? That's good. All right. Now, is it all right
with you if I begin this process now? Thank you very much. Now, here's the
auditing question," bang. "But, let's define it. Let's define it now. What
do we mean by blah, blah and man?"
We actually have done a tiny shift of attention without distracting him too
much. Now, we've asked him the pertinent question. You've always got to ask
him the right question. You got the idea? You ask him the right question.
Obviously he had a present time problem about the auditing or he wouldn't
have been answering the auditing command all night. Obviously, you didn't
end session. Obviously, there was some unconfidence involved in the thing,
because he obviously, too, must have gone on self-auditing to some degree,
so the session couldn't have been ended.
In other words, you've got to size up the situation. That's not a pat
situation. The only thing pat about it is, is you've got to direct the pc's
attention. You don't let a pc go on talking forever. It is a dirty trick.
The pc will feel silly after a while. He will feel very out of session.
Direct his attention and not crudely, suddenly or accusatively. You get the
point?
Now, when is a pc in-session? Pc is in-session when he is able to talk to
the auditor - change that over from "willing" to "able" - and is interested
in his own case. Those are the only real requisites to being in-session.
Given those things, you've got it. Now, if a pc is talking to the auditor,
he obviously is able to talk to the auditor. If he's talking about his own
case, he obviously is interested in his own case, so obviously there is a
session. And you've got to handle it as a session. Because he's suddenly
apparently elected you as the auditor. And maybe he's being audited by
somebody else.
All right, this pc says to me, "You know, in that session yesterday - I was
having a session yesterday - and all of a sudden we ran into a society
where all they did was cook. And I got to thinking about cooking and I got
more and more worried about cooking and so forth and I just realized in
this lifetime I've never been able to cook," and about this time I suddenly
realize that I have been elected the auditor, don't you see? He is not just
talking about his case conversationally, but is actually talking a session,
see?
So I say, "Well, what did your auditor do about that?" In other words, I
give him right back to his auditor. Just mention his auditor and I've
shifted his attention. Well, obviously his attention is stuck there.
Now, when you get very, very expert, and when you seem very smooth to pcs,
it will be because by interrogation you can shift the pc's attention. And
when you can shift a pc's attention smoothly, why, he will get an idea that
you have terrific altitude. And it's all in the expertness with which you
can shift the pc's attention. You use that with questions.
Now, every once in a while in giving a Security Check, you ask Instructors,
"How do you give a Security Check?" Well, that's fine, you give a Security
Check by reading the question, finding out if there's a drop on the meter.
All right, there's a drop on the meter. That's where you fall down, if
you're going to fall down on a security question. There's where you fall
down. Right there at that point. You've asked the question which is on the
printed form,
you've gotten a fall on the meter and right there a large percentage of
auditors lay an egg. They do not direct the pc's attention. They read the
question again. They do some version of question-reading; they don't direct
the pc's attention with a question.
Now, just look at this little tiny microscopic trick here. You say, "Have
you ever pushed over any tall buildings?" And you get a fall on the
E-Meter. Now, instead of directing the pc's attention, you say, "Well, have
you ever - " you know, substituting emphasis for brains, "Have you ever
pushed over any tall buildings?" And you get another fall on the E-Meter.
And then you say, well, it requires a different emphasis, so you say, "Have
you ever pushed over any tall buildings?"
Now, you see that hasn't anything whatsoever to do with shifting the pc's
attention. You see what - why it's wrong?
Now, even a banal shift of the auditing thing tends to shift the pc's
attention. "Have you ever pushed over any tall buildings?" You get a fall.
You could say, "Well, what was that?" Well, now if you point too
emphatically to the meter, you'll get an out-of-sessionness on the part of
the pc, because his attention is being pulled out of the session, out of
his bank, onto the meter.
I as often as not will assume that the pc is not interested in the meter,
but at this moment is very interested in having had an odd phenomenon of
some kind or another. If you get a fall, it's usually accompanied by some
electronic shift of some kind. You know, the fellow's going, "Tall
buildings, I never thought of that before," you know. It's kind of a -
maybe it's a lurch in his stomach or he gets a twitch in the end of his
nose or his hands feel kind of sweaty suddenly. Well, I don't refer to
this, I refer to that. I'm just as likely as not to say, "What happened
just then?"
"Well, I had this lurch."
"All right. Does that have anything to do with tall buildings?"
"Oh, I can't stand tall buildings."
"Well, have you ever pushed over any tall buildings?"
You get the shift? You put his attention more on him, more on the bank and
then reiterate the question that we want to know. And he says, "Well, it
just seems like it might have happened. It seems - it seems possible. It's
- it just seems like it's something I woulld do."
"Well now, why do you think you would do that?"
"Well, I have this fear of every time I see a tall building, that it'll
fall over."
"Oh. Recall a time when that was that way.
"Yes, yes, definitely."
"All right. Now, have you ever pushed over any tall buildings?"
"Augh, it's an awful question you're asking me."
He gets the idea that his attention actually by this time is being actually
ground right straight down on the bank. He'll get a sensation that he's
really being shoved into it, but you have not changed your intonation, you
haven't changed the starkness of the question, you haven't lightened it up,
you haven't made it more accusative, anything else. But the pc gets the
sensation of you have just taken his attention, and you have said, "Stop
looking at me, stop looking at the E-Meter, stop looking at this beautiful
bright day around here and look at that bank, damn you. Now, did you or
didn't you?" He'll actually get this kind of a pressure - sensation.
What have you actually done? You've restimulated the channel. You've
restimulated the whole chain. You've got the whole chain of tall buildings
now in total restim, both by your security question, by asking if there was
some sensation that went along with it. By asking him if he ever has any
difficulties with tall buildings. Is there anything he's ever noticed,
recalling a time when he noticed that and so forth. And now the security
question again, "Have you ever pushed over any tall buildings?" And boy,
he'll feel by this time as though he has been run into by a Mack truck. And
he's going to give!
"Well, all right, if you put it that way, I pushed over the Empire State
Building. That's why it's in ruins. That's why New York's never been the
same since," if he ever did. He'd give it to you right now. "Ohh!" You get
why? Because your ability to fix attention has been horse-powered up to his
inability to fix attention and you have made him able to fix his attention
on the thing which his attention is dispersing off of. And he gets the idea
just as though you've backed up a Caterpillar tractor back of him and
shoved. "Get in there and pitch. Let's you and him fight." This is what the
thing sort of adds up to.
All right. I'll go over another instance of this. Now, "Have you ever
whistled at a girl?" You get a reaction on the E-Meter. Don't say, "Ah, I
have a reaction on the E-Meter here. Urn, let's see, is there any other way
I can pull your attention out of session? Do you have any present time
problems? Are you worried about your wife or anything like that? Don't you
realize you've been far away from home? Your children might be trapped in a
burning building." Don't go on this particular course of action. That is
the wrong course of action. That is the escapist approach. Letting the pc
escape. You don't do that at all. You do it quite in reverse. You say,
"Have you ever whistled at a girl? Did you have any sensations just then?"
"Yeah, as a matter of fact I had this sensation right across my head."
"Oh, well, what do you suppose that might have been?"
"Well, I don't know. I don't know."
"Well, what would it have to do with whistling or pretty girls or something
like that?"
"Well, I don't know. Why, how could it poss - ah, there it is again!"
"Well now, did you have a picture just as you did that?"
"Oh, yeah, well."
"Well, all right. Well, have you ever whistled at any pretty girls?"
"Well, no, not - ow! Not that I know of, so forth. I don't recall. Uh..
"Well, do you remember any pretty girl?"
"Oh yes. Oh, yes, yes, remember a pretty girl."
"Did you ever whistle at her?"
"I get - there it is again."
"Well, what's going on here? What are you looking at there? What are you
looking at there?"
"Well - well, if you must know, I whistled at this pretty girl down on -
ouch! - I went down on - ouch! - down on Main Street - ouch! - one day and
it was somebody's wife and he - he - he socked me."
"Oh, all right, you did whistle at a pretty girl, then."
"Yes, I - I did."
"All right. Ever whistle at any other pretty girls?"
"No - ouch! Uh - well..
"Did you ever whistle at any other pretty girls?"
"Well, if you must know, I have never done anything else. It is just
something that I just can't keep from doing. I try and I try and I try and
I keep standing there on drugstore corners, whistling. I whistle and I
whistle! What are you going to do about it! Hey, you know, it's a funny
thing, I never remembered that before. I never noticed that about myself
before."
All this type of phenomena falls out of the barrel by just the direction of
his attention. And you eventually will put it right onto the chain of
withholds and overts. You see? But it's all in handling the attention. And
as I give you again, I'll give you the wrong way to.
Now, if you "Have you ever whistled at any girls? Did you object to my
lighting the cigarette now while I was auditing you? Oh, you didn't? All
right, that's fine. Good enough. Are those leads far enough apart? Okay.
Now, let's see, what were we getting at? What was I just asking you? Uh -
oh. Mm-hm. Well, there couldn't have been much reaction on that; I didn't
notice it. Let's go to the next question."
Now, that would not be a good sound auditing approach. Why? Because it's
demonstrating not-knowingness on the part of the auditor, the reverse of
which is all-seeingness. All right. Let's get to the next point.
A person who security checks as though he's in the dark will always be in
the dark with a Security Check. A person who pretends knowingness to too
great a degree when he is doing a Security Check is also violating the
R-factor. The R-factor is simply this: you want to know and you're going to
get him to find out. And that is all the R-factor there is. And if you're
in that state of mind you will direct his attention neatly every time. Not,
you want to give a perfect Security Check; not, you want to follow the
perfect technology; not, you want to always do your E-Meter right. See,
those are not R-factors.
You're interested and you want him to find out. If those are the only
R-factors present, boy, can you security check. You'll find out that a
Security Check that ordinarily would take you thirty-six hours to get rid
of - and some of them do take that long to get rid of - you could cut it
right on down to about a four-or five-hour Security Check and you'd get the
lot. It's just that difference.
You notice a fall on your meter, you know at once the pc is interiorized
into some kind of a withhold. He's on a chain. It's live right now. Well,
you take full advantage of that fact. You call his attention to the subject
matter of the Security Check. You ask him to define the subject matter of
the Security Check. You ask him what's been going on in this particular
department. If he's ever had any trouble in this particular area. All why.
Your questions are totally prompted not by a textbook question that I give
you, but by the fact that you are interested and you are damn well going to
find out.
And if that is the only R-factors with which you're dealing when you do a
Security Check, you'll find out they really whiz. "Here's an interesting
question, you know? It says, 'Have you ever raped anyone?' Have you ever
raped anyone? When? You ever been worried about rape? You ever thought
about raping? You ever been raped? What just happened just then? What did
you feel just then? No, are you looking at a picture?" Get this kind of an
approach, you see? It's all in, in, in.
And you get his attention all the way in, he'll pick it up. And he'll
suddenly say, "Oh, I forgot all about her. It was Betsy Ann. I was two."
And you say, "All right, let's see if she is clean now. You ever raped
anyone?" You got the difference of approach?
You've got to handle the pc's attention. Now, the reason why you very often
fail to do this is because you do not perhaps have a sufficient reality on
the weakness of a pc's ability to handle his attention on the subject of
the buttons which make him aberrated.
Those things which have aberrated the pc have overwhelmed him. It's always
a case of overwhelm. Overwhelm, what is that? Push in too tight. You could
say, overwhelm, pushed in too tight. All right. Well, naturally, his
attention must at one time have been a restraining factor on keeping things
from coming in on him. That's a thetan's primary weapon. So he's
restraining things from coming in on him.
Now, what do you think that we're going to have here when he gets on this
subject again? We're going to have somebody whose attention cannot be
controlled on that particular subject, because his attention has been
overwhelmed on that subject. So therefore, if the auditor does not steer
the pc's attention on the subjects in which the pc is having difficulty or
on which he's having difficulty, the pc's attention does not get directed
and thereby just wanders or just disperses. The pc is not capable of
directing his attention on the subject of his aberrations. That is why he
stays aberrated. That is why it remains unknown to him. That's the simple
mechanic of the thing.
He's a man of iron in all such places except as appertains to his terminal
line. And there it's solid custard. And the custard runs to the right and
his attention runs to the right and it runs up and his attention runs up
and it runs down and it just doesn't matter what the custard does, that's
what his attention is going to do. And unless there's somebody around the
auditing session who will direct the pc's attention, it isn't going to be
directed by anybody but the valence. Now, isn't that fascinating?
This person, let us say, has a terminal - I'll have to pick one now that
nobody here has - has a terminal called a streetcar conductor. All right,
streetcar conductors are always directing things one way or the other, so
we don't have the auditor directing any attention and we have a pc, of
course, who is in the middle of the valence called "streetcar conductor,"
so the pc can't direct his attention, so we have left the session in the
hands of a streetcar conductor. Well, isn't that right? You can see it very
graphically. That's correct. That's who's running the session.
Now, if this session runs overboard, of course, you say, "Well, it wasn't
my fault. I was just sitting there going through the rituals, swinging the
incense in the right directions, making orbital star patterns with the
incense pot. And the pc, he was sitting there in the chair and we had him
on the E-Meter, so it couldn't have gone wrong."
And there's a mysterious third party present called a streetcar conductor
and he has said, "End of line, everybody out," and the pc says, "Well,
that's the end of that."
And you say, "Yes? All right. Here's the next auditing question." You get
the idea? There's nobody directing any attention around there but the
valence. The mysterious third party.
And when it's a streetcar conductor everybody gets in and everybody gets
out and they get to the end of the line and they go back to the beginning
of the line. And when you run an engram with the streetcar conductor
running it, look what it'd look like: You get to the middle of the engram
and lose a lot of passengers; personnel of the engram would disappear at
the beginning or the end or someplace; and then all of a sudden there'd be
a tremendous number of people present that hadn't been present before.
Trolley would come off the wire and stop for a while. And then you ask the
question, "Why is it taking so long to clear this person?" Well, that's
because streetcar conductors aren't trained auditors. You see?
Now, maybe there's a lot of bitterness and sarcasm mixed up in this, but
there's a little truth to be found there, if you scrape at it. Unless the
auditor directs the pc's attention, we have a valence that will do God
knows what with it, and we have the pc who can't.
So out of the three people present, in a clearing session, we've only got
one person who could direct the pc's attention, correctly, to get auditing
done. And when that person doesn't do it, no auditing occurs, except by
accident and the grace of Ron.
Now, I will admit that things are put together well enough that some
auditing is always occurring. But just a minute. This is a special person
who is running a special terminal. Every pc is a special case - every one
of them.
All right, now you get a pc who has a terminal of a lion tamer. And if you,
the auditor, don't closely direct the pc's attention as you're running the
terminal "a lion trainer," you're going to be trained as a lion.
Now, don't come around and tell me that the session keeps going off the
rails, because I will always tell you that obviously you aren't directing
the pc's attention. That would be the pat answer which any Instructor could
give any auditing session that started going haywire. Now, the auditor at
no time should leave a session on automatic. You leave a session on
automatic and you're just asking for it. But what are you asking for?
You're asking for the session to be taken over one hundred percent by the
valence that you are running out of the pc.
So now, don't keep complaining that the pc is a difficult pc or that the pc
ARC breaks easily or that the pc won't go into session, because pc be
damned; there is no pc practically. When you - when Newton and Watt and
some of the other - and I think an Italian named Erg, got themselves all
fixed up, in measuring energies, they didn't get a small enough unit to
measure the actual energy-attention output of a pc who is stuck in the
middle of a valence. It is too slightly microscopic to even be measurable.
So if you're blaming this one one-millionth of a grasshopper-power of a
person that is left, you see, after you've given full play to the terminal
and then you're blaming this tiny, tiny amount of residual remaining energy
for everything that's going wrong, it'd be something like saying, "This
roaring torrent of a raindrop went down the side of Cleopatra's obelisk and
split it in half." And that just doesn't make sense, you see? It isn't
possible.
Now, this pc may be a very forceful person. This pc may be able to do lots
of things. This pc is not totally a slave to his valence. Nobody ever is.
But remember, you've got him in a situation where all the mechanics of
auditing have made him again a total slave to this valence. And now you're
going to blame him for what goes wrong. Well, there isn't any blame
connected with it, unless the pc's attention - the one-millionth of a
grasshopper-power left of it - is very closely directed by the auditor, of
course what is left there - it's the entire investment of the pc's energy,
via the valence. And you will see that valence all of a sudden
materializing and going all over the place and doing all sorts of wild
things with the session and so forth. You see what you've asked for?
You can almost predict how a pc will operate in a session, once you have
his valence. If you know his terminal, if you're doing a poor job or if the
pc is out of session or if your pc's confidence in you as an auditor is
low, the session is going to be run by his terminal. So therefore, if
you're going to run a bad session on him, we know at once how the pc will
operate. He will operate just like that terminal.
So when this sort of thing shows up, don't say, "Well, the pc is a
difficult pc." That is a - that's nonsense. No pcs are difficult pcs, but
some valences are bitch kitties.
All right. Now, let's take somebody who has a terminal "surgeon." Now,
wouldn't this be very interesting to audit, if you didn't run a session? If
you weren't running a tight session? And you didn't have the pc in-session?
Something around there is going to get sawed up, that's for sure.
Because the terminal knows how to run a session. The terminal knows very
well how to run a session: You get the anaesthetic mask, and you lay it
out, and you get the sutures laid out and you get the oxygen put out
properly and you lay out the saws and knock some bits of rust off of them.
See? And it would all depend on what part of the track, what condition of
operation would take place in the session. So some would be rougher
sessions than others.
And, of course, a surgeon is liable to do all sorts of weird things like
hold the patient down. But who's the patient around here? Well, it's liable
to be the auditor, it's liable to be almost anybody. So if you're running a
surgeon some time, as a terminal on a pc, and you find yourself lying on
the floor, with both of your shoulder blades pinned to the floor and him
fishing around for a pen knife to cut your throat, you will at least have
the satisfaction of remembering that you once heard a lecture in which it
was stated that this could happen and you will at least know what you did
wrong. You didn't direct the pc's attention. That's the whole lot. I mean,
you can't really say much more of it than that.
When you cease to direct the pc's attention, there's only one party left in
the session. And of coarse, the session will go exactly in that direction.
I shudder to think what would happen up on the second floor if we had a
chariot driver! You can see there that we have a point, though. Maybe put
that way, maybe some of these incomprehensibles will cease to be
incomprehensible.
There's an old rule, an old law, that's found in the Original Thesis. There
are three laws in there. But it just amounts to the fact that, the auditor
plus the pc is greater than the engram bank. And the auditor minus the pc
may or may not be greater than the engram bank, but certainly minus the pc
minus the auditor, and you've got nothing left but an engram bank. You get
the idea? So it takes both the auditor and the pc in there pitching to hold
a terminal down and run it out. And that's about all it amounts to. Takes
them both. And the way you get them both is to direct the pc's attention.
How many ways are there of doing this? Not to labor the point particularly,
but how many ways could you direct the pc's attention? Now, you just think
of some of the ways you have misdirected the pc's attention. Can you think
of having misdirected the pc's attention? Sometimes you can be quite
inadvertent. Drop the ashtray. You certainly have directed his attention.
But to the wrong place. He doesn't have any bank in the vicinity of the
ashtray. That's the wrong place for his attention to go to. So of course,
then, the tension built up by the session explodes, the pc drops out of the
session, you feeling guilty for having dropped the ashtray, drop out of the
session and what do we have left? We have a lion tamer, a surgeon,
something like this. Everybody quit the session but the valence.
And that's the trouble with valences, is they're educated never to quit.
You see, you've come very close to the basic dynamic principle of existence
of Dianetics when you come to the valence. What is trying to survive? As
soon as we realize that you don't have to try to survive, as soon as you
realize that survival itself, the effort to survive, is a complete idiocy
in a being who can't do anything else.
The most native natural skill a thetan has is survival. So now he's got
survival on a via. He's got survival all built into a beingness. He doesn't
have any survival left and he has become so concerned and worried about
survival that it's all built into the beingness. Well, of course, these
beingnesses on a via have a tremendous amount of survival mixed up in them.
And they can be very resistive. But they are only very resistive when you
get two willful missings in a session: the auditor and the pc. And then of
course you have survival rampant.
And, of course, the survival of such a being is interesting in the fact
that none of its actions ever add up to survival. That is what is peculiar.
Once you get survival on a big via, of some character or another, it winds
up as a non-survival. It winds up as a succumb.
So if any valence was left to ramp and roar across the boards of life,
totally undeterred by a person's native good sense, well, naturally, it
would wind up to the most destructive activity imaginable. In the first
place, a valence's actions and packages are usually out of time. In other
words, this person is all adjusted for the French terror. All geared up.
All the now-I'm-supposed-to to get one through a certain period of
existence - there it is. Only we aren't in the French terror. Do you see?
Now, a road - a highwayman of yesteryear - he knows how to survive. You go
out and you stick up coaches. See? And you go back and spend it on the
babes. That's how you survive. We don't know why - he probably had a lot of
fun at that time. But that was all a very good business to be in, perhaps,
when we had nothing but cavalry for police. But now the odds have mounted
up. And things have changed. And you just try and disassemble a .45
automatic with the same field-stripping procedure as a flintlock pistol and
you'll fumble. In other words, the skills are all out-of-date, all out of
time and so on. So the actual activities of this fixed valence add up to
nothing but succumb. The fellow's out of money, so he goes out and he buys
a horse and he puts on a plumed hat and he rides out to Ashdown Forest,
waiting for the coach to come through. And it's a wet night and he gets
pneumonia and that's it. See, it's all as idiotic as that. And I do mean as
idiotic as that - if not more so.
Now, you take some fellow, he's liable to believe that being a good....
Well, let's say he was a designer, a clothes designer. And in this lifetime
he's been trying to be a clothes designer. But his valence is clothes
designer and he's tried to be a clothes designer in this lifetime and he
just somehow or another can't be a clothes designer in this lifetime.
That's one of the most remarkable points about valences: is those people
who have tried to be their valences in this lifetime have laid the most
gorgeous eggs. It's fantastic. I mean, how far off these things can be.
Why? Because they are valences rigged up to live in another age and time
and they are incapable of change.
Now, why is a valence so incapable of change? That's because it's rigged
for survival, so all of its facets and aspects are fixed. It won't change.
Now, let's say at some time or another you've had a serving girl. And
you've tried to teach her to set the table. Day after day, week after week,
you try to teach her to set the table. And somehow or another she is never
able to set the table. She just cannot do it. She either breaks the dishes
or spills them on the floor or trips over the edge of the tablecloth. And
she keeps putting the roast pans on the table and the platters back in the
oven, and she keeps spilling the soup and it just is a mess. And you say,
"Now look, with a little good training - with a little good training - now
we'll be able to make this grade." And two years later you're still trying.
Well, past civilizations have handled it this way: They have broken the
valence with punishment. And in a past time the way that servant girl would
have been trained is after she broke her first dish she would have been
whipped for half an hour and then sent back again to set the table. And you
know the funny part of it is, that didn't work either.
They take criminals and whether they use the whip or the jail or the stock
or anything else, they just keep going back stealing cabbages. The guy
keeps on stealing cabbages. That's what he does. And they put him in the
stock, you put him in jail, you fine him - in more modern times, why, you
deny him his social security or do something rigorous like this - and he
still goes and steals cabbages. Why? Because you're working against the
survival pattern of a valence. And there's nothing can break it.
Now, when you finally do break the person down, the person now is nothing
because all you have is a broken valence. You don't even have a person
anymore, see? See, it's possibly even better to have a good operating
valence, you know, than to be nobody at all, but it's much better to be
yourself than an operating valence.
In handling criminals - I'm very prone to be very careless with people and
so forth, because I myself am seldom in any grave and terrible danger from
their actions. But I have had, as I've mentioned before, I've had a whole
shipload of criminals, and I never tried to make them into honest men. It
was not necessary. In the first place, they were doing a criminal thing
like fighting a war anyhow and just the simple matter of saying, "All
right, it doesn't matter what you do on this ship, nothing is ever going to
go into your record. We're never going to make another mark in your
records." That was enough. "If there's any punishments, you have to be
satisfied with the punishments I hand out, and that's all right." And, of
course, the punishments I handed out were as freak and unique as any jail
kangaroo court. You know, very freak. You know, like, "Well, you'll have to
paint that gun all over, all by yourself, and so forth, and when you get
that gun totally painted and so on, why, we'll inspect it. And if we find
one single fleck of rust on it anywhere that hasn't been adequately handled
and covered up, why, then you've got to paint the whole gun again." This
was very satisfactory to that type of mentality. Very satisfactory.
Well, what was the net result? You had no broken valences. I suppose they
stole each other ragged. But they couldn't object. And that was the way it
went. And it was the most pleasant calm vista you had ever heard of. Why,
there were ships full of honest men all over the place that were appetite
over tin cup, at each other's throats day and night - but not this ship.
There was no pressure exerted. Interesting, isn't it?
So you'd say that an operating valence is better than a broken valence. But
a person is better than a valence. And you get your gradient scale. Of
course, I say better than a valence, that's an understatement of magnitude.
There's a tremendous difference between a person and an operating valence.
Once in a while you ask what is a GE? Well, a GE is just a valence. A GE is
some kind of a superpackaged valence that has been set up one way or the
other, that can continue to be regenerated. Now the particular form that
man has adopted is no longer very useful to him. Various things happen to
this particular form which shouldn't be happening to it. This form is
perfectly all right in a meat-eater society. You can go out and eat and be
eaten and slug animals over the head and be overwhumped, and your main
difficulty is with bodies.
Well, you get a human body trying to duplicate a machine. Ah, well, that
requires a different type of body. That's right. A thetan is not very happy
running a machine in a meat body. He just isn't. He's much happier in a
robot, doll body type of setup. Why? Because it's made out of metal and is
animated and the machine is made out of metal and it's animated. So he does
a perfectly nice duplication, he never gets sick running machines. Get the
idea?
And, of course, you get a society now that has a high velocity. If you're
in a car out here going thirty miles an hour and you hit a tree, the body
you've got will have had it. It'll at least get bruised. Now, in a high
velocity society that runs something on the order of fifty, sixty miles an
hour on the highway and so forth, you don't want bodies that go streaming
all over the road. Why, they bleed, and all kinds of things. And
furthermore, they're not good survival for machines. Machines can't eat
bodies. They're not good fuel, they're not good anything. You have to go
bury them someplace because they start putrefying and so forth. It's a
total waste.
You take a doll body, a doll body, a crash at sixty miles an hour in a doll
body would be something like a mosquito bite. So you, of course, can
perfectly afford to run a sixty mile an hour vehicle while you're in a doll
body. You got the idea?
All right, so you have man protesting, very ineffectually, about machinery.
Oh, well, there's - it's almost died out, everybody's sort of overwhelmed
by the machine, but it's a big lot of trouble. You have man organized into
safety councils and all sorts of things in order to restrain traffic and so
forth. Well, he's unhappy, because he's in a fixed-valence state.
Now, at no time am I advocating anything like a pastoral return to nature
or that we all pick up doll bodies and carry on, because it isn't
necessarily true that a meat body - a humanoid-type body - it isn't
necessarily true that it's a bad body form. It is not a bad body form. As a
matter of fact you should be able to take a meat body and throw it up
against a brick wall that practically flattens it till it looks like a
pancake, pick it up, shake it out, put it back on again and it's perfectly
all right; there isn't even a bruise.
You have the evidence of this. What holds a broken leg broken? Have you
ever healed anybody's broken leg? Have you ever speeded up a healing or an
injury of any kind whatsoever? Well, what was holding it? If you could help
it without doing anything with it, all you had to do was run out the engram
or something of this sort. If you've helped somebody get well, then it must
have been that the thetan himself was slowing down the process of healing.
Ah, but let's take that just a little bit further and say, then, the thetan
must himself have been perpetuating the process of destruction. So it takes
an entirely different type of orientation to run a meat body in a
scientific, machine, high-speed society. There's no liability in doing so,
but there is one where the body is oriented to fight lions and there aren't
any lions. You look every place and you look under the sofas and in back of
the hedges and you can find no lions. But there are a lot of things out
there running up and down the highway that make a lion look tame. I'll tell
you, a pat from a ten-ton truck is much more serious.
So, a fixed condition of a valence which is so fixed and unalterable that
nothing can change it, not even punishment, and which is out-of-date, will
of course make an unhappy person. Inevitable that it will make an unhappy
person. Now, that these things have survival potential, nobody will
dispute. They have tremendous survival potential. In that the entire
history of healing has never been able to do anything with a valence is
something on the order of an attestation. They've never been able to do
anything with them either.
They've had all sorts of campaigns like "Be nice to the insane," you know?
Doesn't work. There's nothing - there's been no way of handling a
readjustment of beings.
Now you have a method that does handle the situation. All right, well don't
be surprised that while you're applying this, the valence objects. It will.
You let a valence run on auto, be totally neglected and you're in for
trouble. Now I'll tell you that I have learned a great deal this summer. I
have learned a great deal this summer. I have learned, not by treating
people experimentally but by doing what we have always been doing, the best
that we could do at that time, I have learned that not even the basic
processes of Scientology will do more than a patch-up when it comes to
clearing - not even the basic processes of Scientology applied to a
preclear whose valence has not been located. They won't do anything very
much. It's not a permanent proposition.
Oh yes, you could cave it in, oh yes, you could change it around, oh yes,
you can make some shifts; but you can't clear them. You can make an
alteration of case, but you can't make a regain of case. You have to apply
the route of "find his goal" and that permits you to find the valence chain
and then audit the valence. Now you can get someplace. Now you can whiz,
because you are right there where you should be.
You have a pc who is unaware of being somebody he is being. They don't know
they're being this person. So what use is being this person to them? It's
no joy to them - totally unknown situation. And this sort of thing is
something - is getting in their road and making them succumb on certain
projects and is tripping up their lives and is messing them up in general,
and they don't even know what it is.
Well, there's just an addiction to another period and zone of life, another
time of history, another skill package. Fortunately, not all men's skill
packages hang up as valences. You shouldn't say that everything a man can
do or every package of skills a man gets is the result of a valence. It is
not. It is not. A thetan is totally capable of doing these various things.
For instance, I don't think I ever got into - I probably never had a
valence of when knighthood was in flower - that type of valence. Those
periods come and go. On every planet you get everybody tired of doing
anything and you'll get a period of when knighthood was in flower, you
know, and it goes through the same pattern lines and all that sort of
thing. All right, that's fine.
You arrive in a society of that character. Now, if you can excel in any way
in a society of that character, then it must be that you can't be operating
with a valence. How can you excel if you're operating as a valence? Because
the operation of a valence is non-sentient operation. It is operation in
the absence of knowingness. Well, you try to take one single run down the
lists without knowing consciously how to do it. Just try it. And you're
going to wind up in the middle of the damnedest scramble of tinware you
ever were in.
There are never any two runs just alike. There are never any two jousts
alike. So you can't even form a good valence to do that. But when a thetan
is totally overwhelmed and when he has totally given up and when he decides
to totally become this thing which will thereafter be him forevermore, he's
now had it. He will never be able to do it again. Isn't that interesting?
He will never be able to be a good priest if his valence is a priest. Why?
Well, the basic underlying impulse is what? How did he get to be the
priest? That's interesting. How did he get into this valence? It must have
been by resisting and trying to knock off priests. And he must have worked
awfully hard at it. And he must have scuppered an awful lot of priests.
Man, the landscape must have been littered with them.
And the basic impulse of the preclear toward the valence is destruction of
the valence. So, therefore, every time you don't let the pc get at it, why,
you get a valence takeover, because the pc has lost - what is the first
thing he thinks he loses to? He must be losing to the valence. Although he
might be blaming the auditor, he thinks the auditor has now ganged up with
the valence, you see? It's the valence which has overcome him again. So his
basic impulse toward a valence is destruction. So you ever think you're
going to get anything but destructive action from something which is being
operated now by a thetan which has its primary impulse of destruction? It's
primarily a destructive impulse.
So you have people who are living in valences toward which they have
nothing but the most violent feelings. If they have any feelings left at
all way down on the lower realm, they have the most violent destructive
feelings toward that valence.
Now, this valence is going to succeed, is it? Ha, ha, ha! The dickens it
is! So if we had a valence of a jousting knight and the person were totally
in the valence of a jousting knight, we would put him out on the lists, and
we could put him on the horse, and we could pretty him up, and we could
polish his armor, and we could give him the most dizzle-dazzle of devices
for his shield, and we could give him the very best ash spears, and we
could have the prettiest girls tying their most suggestive underthings
around his neck, and he'd wind up in a pile of tinware.
Because every time the thetan wakes up, even slightly, to call for a
decision, he makes a destructive decision with regard to the action which
he is doing. Halfway down the lists, the thetan says, "Let me see, where am
I? Oh, this!" - crash! See? It just requires the slightest rekindling of
the actual intelligence and personality of the being to cause a destruction
to take place.
Now, it doesn't have to be in anything as romantic or as bombastic as
jousting knight. This fellow's a machinist. That's the valence. He's been
totally overwhumped by machinists. So this life, he's moving through
Coventry, see, and there's no jobs anyplace but that of a machinist. And he
finds himself there and he sort of trains as a machinist. And at first, it
looks like he has a little facility of it, but he doesn't, but he does, but
he doesn't, but he does. And then one day he's standing up at the machine
and suddenly the thetan wakes up slightly and says, "Where am I? Oh!
Machinist!" crush, you see, and into the machinery he goes, that's it. Get
the idea? And he finds out he can't push him into the machinery because the
machinist gets well and is back at his platform again. Now he could make
him sick. See? He could make him feel bad. He could make him lazy. He could
make him inactive.
And you might say the primary battle of the universe is the battle between
the thetan and the valence. And the impulse of the thetan is total
destruction of the valence, which ought to make your job as an auditor
awfully damned easy.
Because you're auditing somebody whose first wish is to get rid of this
thing. And as soon as he has, he's won. He'll come back to being himself
and he'll be able to walk with his head in the sky again. But until that
time he's defeated. He's defeated from the moment that he was overwhelmed
way back a hundred trillion years ago, right up till now. He's been
defeated the whole ruddy lot.
So that ought to make your job very, very easy. And if you look at it like
that, you'll see. You'll also be able to understand the activities of men.
You'll understand why this fellow is dramatizing being a bank president and
always going bankrupt. Now, there's another fellow who is a bank president
and he isn't going bankrupt. But he has trouble with a boat. You see? It's
all kind of unexplained and all hit or miss.
Well, it's just that very solid fact of what valence is he in? Because that
for sure he will commit suicide with. He'll commit suicide with it because
his primary foe is that valence and that's all there is to that; that is
the thing he is trying to kill.
And when you find that, the valence will ebb and flow and he will go
through all the propitiative attitudes toward the valence and it will look
for a while as though he really wants to keep this valence and so on and
all kinds of misemotional reactions toward this valence. And it'll get on
up the lot and when he finally comes out in the clear he is not any longer
overwhelmed. So that is what you're trying to do, basically.
So, that is the attention you are trying to direct. You are trying to
direct the pc's attention toward eradication of all of the points which
made him a slave to a valence. And if you fail to direct his attention, of
course, there is nothing else there to be directed. There is nothing else
present except this valence. And if you overwhelm the pc in some fashion,
he will dramatize the valence. So don't blame anybody but yourself if you
have a rough session. And you can always predict how the pc will operate.
If you had somebody who was a trancer, let's say he had a valence called "a
trancer" - you know, it's a person who went into trances. You'd know
whenever the pc was out of session. Because the pc would trance. Pc isn't
any longer present, the valence is present. You see that, as an immediate
detection? All right, get the rudiments in. The rudiments must be out
because the valence took over. See? It's as simple as that.
The more you know about the valence, the easier it is to audit the pc. And
the more you know about the valence, why, the easier it is to predict what
the pc will do and what you've got to do. Now you could sit down and have
yourself a nice thought about that, if you know the valence of the pc
you're operating. Just have a nice thought about it. Say, "I wonder what
this PC would do," and just mentally forecast, what would be this pc out of
session? What would be this pc as the total valence? What would this pc do
as the total valence? Because that's what the pc is doing as a total
valence when the pc is out of session. So anytime the pc does that, you
know you should get your rudiments in. See how tricky that is? This
information can be used.
All right. So, the first signal that you have failed to direct the pc's
attention and that you have complimented the overwhelmingness of the
valence, is a breakdown of the rudiments. Well, now you should be a clever
enough auditor not to let it go that far. You shouldn't let rudiments break
down. You should be able to catch them before they fall.
Now, some people have a fast reaction time and when an egg falls off the
table, they are very able to catch it before it hits the floor. And other
people, when the egg falls off the table, they have to go get a mop. And
the auditor who has to go get a mop all the time, which is to say put the
valence in [rudiments in] just isn't reacting very fast. See, he's got a
slow reaction.
Now, what you want, when you're adding all this up - what you want in the
final analysis, is ways and means of observation, of observing a pc to know
what is going wrong and why it is going wrong. To know when the pc is
in-session, when the pc is not in-session.
Now, I've just given you ways and means by which you can do that and it'd
make you appear pretty clever if it.... Well, you know what the pc's
valence is; pc's valence is a robot. Don't think you're really getting down
to it when he starts to clank. No, the valences [rudiments] are out when he
clanks. The pc doesn't clank. You can have a pc sailing all around and he
doesn't clank. But a robot clanks, and you must have brought that into
total replay. Must be a valence out - I mean, a rudiment out for the
valence to be in. See that?
The pc who dramatizes his valence has a rudiment out. Simple? There are
many ways of looking at this sort of thing. And, of course, one of the ways
of handling this wrong would be as follows: Pc's terminal is a robot, so
you've got it all figured out how the pc would operate if he suddenly went
out of valence, he's going to go whir-clank. All right, so the pc is
running through some terrifically heavy stretch of engram or something of
the sort, and he starts going "Rrr-rrr-rrr-rrr."
You say, "Rudiments out. All right. Well, that's the last command of that
particular process. Now let's get these rudiments in."
I don't think that'd be the way to handle that. As a matter of fact, I
think that would have let the valence totally overwhelm the pc. Don't you
see? No, the way to do that, is just be a little more positive, a little
more direct, and direct the pc's attention. You forgot the pc someplace
along the line, that's for sure. And you start directing the pc's attention
and that whir will turn right off. You caught the egg before it went
splash.
These are all the nice little niceties of auditing. These are little tiny
thingamubumps that makes the difference between clearing in ten thousand
hours and clearing in a couple hundred. See?
It isn't enough to say to you challengingly, "Well, now, if you just had
sufficient powers of observation and if you would just learn to look, why,
you would be a good auditor. There. Now, I've said it, and that's it." And
anything you did wrong, why, then just say to you challengingly, "Well, you
just don't know what you're looking at, and so forth, you see, and so on."
That would be a Germanic method of teaching.
I went to Heidelberg once. They specialized in it. When they could get you
into class. But fortunately at Heidelberg there was no compulsion of
attending class. But the favored method of handling a student was just to
show him continuously that he was wrong. Give him some wide generality of
observation, you see, something that could be interpreted in fifteen dozen
different directions, and then give it with complete German didacticness -
usually an involved paragraph, you see, where everything modified
everything and then all the clauses modified the lot. And then just with
the most contemptuous, lordly tone of voice, call the students' attention
to that, as though that solved all the problems of the universe, you see.
It's quite a method of teaching.
Well, we don't pursue this method of teaching, and I would feel I was doing
it to you a little bit if I didn't tell you what you should be looking for
and what you should be looking at. And if you as an auditor have an idea
that you're looking for anything else than compliance of the pc for the
auditing command, direction of the pc's attention to his case, keeping the
pc in-session - if you think you're doing something else, you ought to shed
it as excess baggage. You ought to drop it over in the canal. Because the
canal's a long distance from here. And because it's just so much excess
baggage.
Anything that doesn't contribute to this exact situation of getting the pc
into session, directing the pc's attention, getting the valence plowed out,
and bringing the thetan back up to where he can breathe light and air
again, is not auditing. Anything that detracts from it, you can jettison,
at any time. If you do those things, man, can you get a case to run! And a
case can really run.
You would be amazed how thoroughly and how solidly and how much of a sprint
of gain can be done in one session, with the pc totally in-session and the
auditor in there pitching the whole session all the way through. Wow! I
mean, tremendous changes can occur just by never letting the PC's attention
wander. You say the auditing command and he says, "Whir, whir, whir, whir,
whir, whir, whir, whir, whir, whir, whir, whir, whir, whir, whir, whir,
whir, whir, whir." Well, from about the second whir on you are wasting
time. He hasn't got your auditing command; that's what's wrong. The least
you could say is, "Did you get that?"
"Oh, uh - wha - hmm?"
"Well, here's the auditing command."
Or, "How'd you do that? What were you looking at? Okay, that's good. Good,
here's the next auditing command, bang. What are you looking at now? Did
anything happen then? All right. What's going on?"
For a while he'll say, "Nyyrrr, nyyrrr," and he'll act like a robot or a
lion tamer or whatever he is. And all of a sudden he'll say, "You know,
there's somebody in here looking over my shoulder. Maybe I'd better start
working on this. Do you suppose I ever could.... Do you suppose in some
slight - do you suppose that there's some tiny, tiny, tiny, faint little
chance that at some time at some undetermined future I might possibly get
up parallel with this lion tamer? Do you suppose? I don't know, sounds
pretty - pretty something or oth - . Ah, yeah. It's not true. Couldn't
possibly be...
And then the auditor's back in there again saying, "All right, you can lick
that lion tamer, you know," kind of a thing, "You can direct your attention
around," and so forth. "You don't have to do what the lion tamer does. Now,
what I want you to do is so-and-so and so-and-so." The next thing you know
his confidence starts coming up and his confidence gets bigger, you know,
and there's less and less lion tamer, and there's more and more PC.
But it can ride for a very long time if you just let th - matters take
their course and remember to do everything technically perfect and think to
yourself, "Now, let's see, let me make sure that I get the acknowledgment
across to the pc. I wonder if he got that acknowledgment. No, I think the
next time. Now I'll give a more forceful auditing command this time. Now,
let's see, is the E-Meter all tuned in properly?" and so forth and so on.
You go on worrying about how you're running the session, you won't run one,
because you're worried about directing your attention. You couldn't
possibly be worried about directing your attention and worried about
directing the pc's attention at the same time because now we've got two
pcs. And two pcs don't make a session. And the only thing which is in your
favor and the only reason auditing can be done is, you very seldom have the
same terminals. But wouldn't that be a ball!
You know, auditors will sometimes deny a pc their own terminal, or become
upset because the pc has a terminal similar to theirs. All kinds of
wildball things can happen. But fortunately, there's an infinite number and
the chances of match-up are very slight. So you fall amongst - you fall in
the sunlight that lies amongst the shadows and you can do your job very
easily.
Thank you.


