Thank you.
Well, here we are at what date?
Female voices:
November the 2nd.
Two Nov. AD 11. It's a 1.1 year. We're being very
covert this year.
All right. I'm going to talk to you today about
Class II skills in Security Checking and several new developments in this
particular level and line that you ought to know about. And if you're not up to
the point at this stage of the game where you know how to read an E-Meter, why,
there used to be an old gallows—this was a Norman keep, you know? And we'll
have to build it again and hang you. But you've got time during the building to
learn.
The worst thing about E-Meters is of course TR 0. TR
0 goes out, if you haven't had any TR 0, it's not fairly flat, you have trouble
with E-Meters.
Now, an E-Meter is a deadly weapon, and you can
slaughter a pc with one by misreading it. It's not like a rifle. The only way
you can do any damage with a rifle is use it with great accuracy.
Well, of course, you can also have a backfiring sort
of rifle and you can also look down the barrel and put your toe on the trigger
experimentally. But an E-Meter is not deadly at all unless it's misused. And if
your TR O is out and you're looking at the pc and looking at the E-Meter and
looking at the question, and you've only got two eyes, you see, and you need
three, you can actually miss reads.
Now, a—the only read that is important is an instant
read; you're never worried about latent reads. So you said the question and
then you waited for a while, and then it finally sagged. Well, you'd just
better go on to the next question because the thing is not there. What—all you
want is an instant read. You ask the question: within a tenth of a second you
get that needle reacting If you've got an instant read, you've got a read on
the E-Meter. If you haven't got an instant read, if it takes a half a second, a
second or something like that, providing of course you're using a standard
E-Meter of an approved pattern....
There are meters around, by the way—they're corny
stuff that has been brought around—which have brought E-Meters into bad repute
because they have a second lag built into them.
Have you ever seen one of these? They used to be
quite prevalent in England. Somebody'd go down to the dime store and buy bits
of old tinware and hang it together with some electric light cord. And they
actually built a lag into the meter so when you asked the question it wouldn't
react for a second. We have some of
them in here in the electrical shop. I'll have to show you sometime. It's how
an electronics man can fix it up so
that you don't get any results. Well, that is an unexpected one and we cut that one out by saying you
use an approved E-Meter and we know that
E-Meter will react instantly and behave properly. It's not a light thing
to do work with a bad E-Meter.
The British Mark IV is the best of these meters. It
is not the least destructible. It is a
little tenderer. It's a better meter but it is more tender than the
American meter. The American meter can
be dropped for three floors and go on working. The British meter can be dropped one airmail flight and arrive at
the other end with somebody having to look into it. We've got most of those bugs out. When we were originally
sending these around the world, by the
way, the extreme temperatures in a cargo hold would crack the transistors. Quite interesting But we got that licked.
Anyway, with an approved meter you get an instant
read and that's the only read you're
interested in. And you're not interested in a latent read. If you follow up
latent reads, your pc will start
telling you what the other fellow did and what they have heard and that their aunt Mamie had a cat once that they
think was stolen. Very valuable. It does a great deal for the case.
Now, the danger is, you take too many of these
things off the case—you know, I mean,
you get a latent read and he says, "Well, Aunt Mamie had a cat and this
cat was in a decayed state. And I think
it was stolen and I heard that and I thought at the time . . ." yap, yap, yap.
And if you go on like this, you're going to wind up
with a needle getting more and more
sluggish, and more and more sluggish and more and more sluggish. And don't you
be puzzled after you've let somebody
get off an awful lot of "I heards" and an awful lot of unkind thoughts and an awful lot of that
sort of thing, that you wind up at the other end of an E-Meter session with the tone arm not moving and the needle
stuck and everything gummed up and the
pc feeling like hell. How come?
Well, you let him sit there and get off nothing but
overts. You let—the session was an
overt. See? I mean, you let the man sit there, or let the girl sit there
and commit overts for an hour. All
right. So now they've got all these new overts. Isn't that what it amounts to?
But your latent read, when pursued, winds you up in
the middle of nowhere. That works on
all types of assessments. Whatever you're assessing, pay no attention to a
latent read, a read which takes
place—well, be on the safe side—takes place after a half a second.
Now, there's a borderline in there, the borderline
in there: some pcs have got sort of a
delayed-bank effect. And you'll notice working on some pcs the sound
itself takes a moment to go through the
circuit. And if you really wanted to be absolutely safe, you could space it out to three quarters of a second,
but don't go any further than that.
Comprehension is landing on the reactive bank which
is instantaneous. And those reads which
are latent are landing on the analytical mind and the pc is figuring it out.
That works for all types of
assessments.
So I say again, if you want to be a successful
E-Meterer, have your TR 0 flat so that
you know what you're looking at, you know? Don't watch the ceiling and
watch the floor and then look back at
the E-Meter to find out if it's reacted, because your instant read is the only important read and it is the one which,
of course, you are going to miss. Naturally
you'll miss it.
You look at the pc and you say, "Now, have you
stolen any lollipops today?" And then you look down at your E-Meter. Well,
it's read and gone. The reading is gone.
Now, this is why the E-Meter can be dangerous:
because we have learned that if you miss a Sec Check question on somebody, you
can wind them up in a ball. Not every time you miss a Sec Check question does
the pc burn down the house. That is a commentary on the psychoanalyst who says,
"Every time a kleptomaniac fails to steal something, he burns down the
house." I love that "every time," you see? It classifies as a
type of a remark of "jewelers never go anyplace." It's just about as
nonsensical.
It is not a universal phenomenon that when an
E-Meter read is missed and you miss the Sec Check and you leave the question
and go on to the next Sec Check question with the last one unflat, that the pc
always burns down the house, shoots the Director of Training or does something
desperate. This is not always true. It's just 99 percent. There is still 1
percent of the time the pc does not do it.
Your pc comes in to session next time—"natter,
natter, natter, natter, unkind thought. Whoo-ah-nyap-yap-yap-yap.
I wonder if Scientology works," and so forth. And they go on and on
and on and on and on and on and on.
You sit and listen to all this stuff. When are you
going to get smart enough to put them on the meter and say, "Who missed a
Sec Check question on you?" and find out what it was and clean it up?
And the person says, "Oh, well."
This is a very fascinating phenomenon that the fact
of missing a Sec Check question is apparently a cross invalidation of
everything that is going on. If you couldn't nail them, they now doubt. It's
very funny. I don't care how long or how often the fellow has been sec checked.
You miss a Sec Check question on him, he gets unhappy.
Now, that's a very important thing because there
resides the easiest way to get rid of new Scientologists known. So I'll just
lay it down there. If anybody wants to go out on a program of getting rid of
every person they connect with that wants to have anything to do with
Scientology, why, the program would be to either audit with a broken meter or a
squirrel meter or something that didn't react, or to use a type of TR 0 which
confronts the back wall or your own eyeballs while you should be reading the
E-Meter and miss Sec Check questions. That's the first and foremost way of
getting rid of people. They'll blow. They'll be very unhappy. It messes them
up.
I think some of you have a little reality on that.
Now and then, why, somebody has missed a Sec Check question on you wildly. And
then you have found yourself sort of chewing your fingernails and nattering to
yourself and not quite know what was wrong And then somebody fortunately comes
along and says, "Who missed a Sec Check question?" or something like
that. And you get it off and straighten it out and all of a sudden you feel
better. It's quite mysterious. It's quite mysterious.
I'm not going into the mechanics of how this
happens. I can tell you the mechanics of how a bank beefs up, now. I've studied
that for two or three days and finally got the answer to that. When you run the
terminal, which is not the terminal of the pc, his attention is too bound up in
his own terminal and goal to as-is the collapsing mass. So the auditor
has—being more in control of the pc's bank than the pc, can of course push
masses in on the pc. But the pc's attention is so bound up in his own goal
terminal that this new terminal, which is being pushed in on him, does not get
as-ised. And that is all there is to it. In other words, he hasn't enough
attention to as-is anything but the goals terminal which he is stuck in. Do you
see that? So his bank beefs up.
Similarly, your E-Meter starts up to the degree that
the person is not as-ising what you're throwing in on him. So you get a high
arm, high arm, high arm—an arm goes way up, an arm sticks. The person's
attention is too bound up in something else to as-is what is being thrown in on
him. Do you see this? So you could sec check a person into a high arm as well
as sec check a person down from a high arm.
Now, how would you sec check a person into a high
arm? Well, you'd make sure all the rudiments were out. You'd very carefully
make sure that all the rudiments
were out before the Security Check was entered in on. You'd make sure that the
pc was unhappy in the room, had a present time problem, didn't want you to
audit him, had an ARC break and had several withholds right in present time and
then start security checking him on heavy questions. And the pc can't confront
the question, can't give you the answer. Do you see the struggle which now
ensues? And he can't get his attention out of present time, he can't remember
the past and you actually could plunge him
around until the arm would go high.
Now, it is not true that every arm going high during
a run must be avoided, but you should understand why an arm is going high and
why an arm hangs high during a Sec Check or during any other kind of run. An
arm, a tone arm, goes high and stays high if more is being thrown in on the pc
than the pc can handle or as-is. Period. That is all there is to it.
Let us say, if a pc were a coal burner and he were
able to generate enough flame to burn one piece, one small cubic inch of coke
per hour, and you emptied the hod into the furnace, you're going to get a
rising tone arm which, of course, is measuring the additional mass entered in
on the pc which the pc isn't as-ising. That make sense to you? I studied it out
the last couple of days to see what the mechanism exactly was here and what was
happening And it becomes valuable.
So when a pc's arm is high—you can just make a
little side rule to go along with it that will serve you in good stead—be very
careful to do one of two things: audit with the rudiments very well in or find
where the pc's attention is stuck and audit that. Now, that doesn't say that
you should run an engram, because the engram might have been the thing which was the hod of coal. You see, that might have
been the upended coal hod.
The pc's attention was busily stuck, gorgeously
impinged, upon a flower. You've been running a process, "What flowers have
you failed to withhold?" or something And all of a sudden an engram comes
up. And you can ask too many questions about the engram and that's the same as
throwing the mass in on the pc, you see?
You can say, "What's the largest object in that
engram? All right. Now, what's some other object in that engram? Now, is there
any masses in that engram of any character?"
Well, of course, that is understandably throwing
heavy mass in on the pc, but you know, you can get the pc into the engram so
the pc can't easily extricate himself, simply by asking the pc too pointed and
too direct a question about the engram.
I'll give you a right-wrong example of this.
This is the right: pc says, "Woo! What an awfully big mountain. I wonder what's going on
here?" and so forth.
And the right thing to do is to say, "Oh. All
right. Okay. Here's the next question."
And here's the wrong thing to do: "Oh? Well,
what is going on around there?" See, that's the same as upending the coal
hod.
Now, don't be too surprised if the tone arm starts
up right at the point you asked that question and stays up thereafter. The
auditor can push mass, pictures, circuits, track in on the pc and move that
track more easily than the pc.
This is one of the hardest things—over the last
eleven years, this has been the hardest single point of instruction: that the
auditor can move the bank more easily than the pc can move the bank.
I've even given demonstrations and told the bank to
go north, east, south, west. And somebody who was totally stuck on the track
and couldn't possibly move on the track and all that sort of thing, and I just
said—not even to the pc—I said, "All right. Now, it will change to the
picture of a theater." It did.
You know, the pc irrevocably stuck in this incident
and can't possibly get out of it. Well, "All right. The incident will now
become the picture of a theater." Bang! It did. He was no longer stuck in
the incident. You can do things like this. You can move the bank around more
easily than the pc.
So your interrogation—your interrogation of the pc
can itself pin the pc's attention at various parts of the track where maybe it
shouldn't be pinned. It's all right to get curious; it's all right to find out
what's going on. But there are times when you should restrain yourself just a
little bit.
The pc all of a sudden starts looking very sad and
you say, "What are you looking at?"
"Well, these pictures of these pyramids.
They're very interesting pyramids."
And you say, "Oh, all right," and give him
the next question. That's real smart, you see?
Pc starting to look slow and comm laggy, you know?
All right. All you'd have to say is, "What about the pyramids? When did
they come up?" When did they come up isn't so bad. But, "What about
the pyramids? Do they have big tops? Do they have small bottoms? Is there
anything going on around the base of the pyramid? What is happening on the
other side of the pyramid? Are there any ditches dug or anything like that
around it?" This will—you're writing script now, you see, so
that's—probably give him a good ARC break right at this point.
Now, you can go on and audit the process you've been
auditing for another half an hour, and you say, "What are you looking
at?"
"Oh," he'll say, "these damn
pyramids, of course."
You gave him the pyramids. Now, don't be so alarmed
about it because all you'd have to do is take them away from him.
Well, how would you take them away from him? The
easiest way to take the pyramids away from him, the easiest way, is simply to
tell the bank to do something else. You know? Say, "Well, what happened
toward the end of that life?" You know? The bank will shift.
And you say, "What happened a couple of lives
later? Is there anything that happened in a subsequent life to that that
answers the auditing question?"
"Oh, there is. Oh well, what do you know?"
You won't hear any more about pyramids.
You can move the bank around. One of the primary
reasons auditors have trouble auditing engrams is they kept expecting the pc to move the bank. They would sit
there and they would say, "All right. What are you looking at?" And
be perfectly willing for the pc to go on and go through the incident, but
nobody was moving through any incident. Why? Because nobody was moving the
incident. Pc was incapable of moving the incident and the auditor wouldn't.
All the auditor would have to say i8, "Well,
the end of the incident will now appear. One year has now gone by. The picture
of that incident, whatever is there,
will appear."
It's very weird, you know. The pc says, "Well,
you see, I was a beggar. I'm a beggar and I see all this. And it's a horrible
marketplace and I'm a beggar. I'm sitting down there and I got leprosy,"
and so forth. And it's just not running, don't you see? And you say so on and
so on.
He keeps saying, "Well, and this leprosy, and
I—I've been leprotic for a long time," and he's getting more and more into
the dramatization of the thing, and so forth.
And you say, "Well, was there a life later than
that when you didn't have leprosy?"
Well, in essence, you've moved the bank.
He says, "Well, if you ask me that way, yes.
Yes, as a matter of fact, I haven't had any leprosy since."
"Well, what are you looking at now?"
"Well, I'm looking at a small boy."
"All right. That's good."
Wrong: "Well, does the small boy have
leprosy?"
You can move the bank around just by the most
innocent questions. You can audit, actually, with—by moving the bank by
innuendo. Not anything direct—north, east, south and west—just ask the pc about
this and that part of their life.
Now, you expect a pc to cycle through an ARC
question. You just expect him to. He cycles through an ARC-type process, you
see? He goes out of present time, he goes back into the past and back into
present time again.
All right. If you depend forever on that
automaticity, you're going to get lost somewhere because he's going to get into
something he's not going to get out o£
You could always say to him—you're trying to get him
back up to present time—"Well, was there an ARC break later than
that?" or, let's say ARC processing, "Well, did you communicate to
anybody after that?"
"Oh, yeah. Yeah."
"Well, the following year did you communicate
to anybody?"
And he'll have to say, "Let's see, what year
was that?" and so forth. And you figure it out for him, you know? And he
figure8 it out.
And he says, "Oh yeah, well, that was 1942.
Yeah."
"Well, all right. Good. Now, did you
communicate to anybody in 1946? Oh? All right, all right. Okay. You did. All
right. Now, did you communicate to anybody in 1950? Oh, all right. Good. Now,
did you communicate to anybody in 1955?"
"Oh yes, yeah. I did."
"Anybody communicate to you in that year?"
"Oh, I'll say they did."
"All right. Has anybody communicated to you in
the last few days?"
"Oh yes, yes, yes."
"Well, have you communicated to anybody
today?"
"Oh, yes."
"And anybody communicated to you?"
"Oh, yeah. As a matter of fact, you just
did."
Well, you've moved the person up to present time by
just interrogation. Interrogation with dates. You just asked him questions
about dates. You didn't directly say "The bank will now shift 1.89 years
north." But you could do that.
The reactive mind is always keyed to
other-determinism and never to self-determinism. And one of its common
denominators is other-determinism. So, of course, the auditor can always move
the bank.
Now, in Sec Checking you very often get somebody
into some kind of a situation, and by your pressure and your demands—you're
saying, "Well, have you ever stolen anything?"
And the person says, "No, I haven't."
"Well, have you ever stolen anything at all?
Now, stolen. Have you ever stolen anything"
And the person says, "No, I
haven't"—you're not getting any read on the meter because you're not
looking at it and you aren't getting any anyhow.
"Well, you mean to tell me in the last two
hundred years you've never stolen anything?"
"Well . . ."
"Now, I'm going to—when I snap my fingers
something you've stolen will appear. Well, all right. All right. When I snap my
finger8 something bigger you have
stolen will appear." All right.
Well, don't be too startled if the tone arm goes up.
It isn't an ARC break. You could probably get away with it but you've just
given him more and more mass that he is not prepared to accept. He isn't about
to as-is it. And then if you just walk off at that point and don't do anything
else about it, you leave these things right there. So make things vanish that
you made appear. A good magician, when he makes a girl disappear on a stage,
particularly at these straight-laced times of police and all that sort of
thing, usually shows her again to the audience, you see? Well, that's a good
principle. Good principle to follow. It's the desent thing to do.
Of course, in tougher, rougher, ancient times, we
didn't do that. We showed the audience this brand-new trick: You put the girl
in the box and you put flaming torches in at every corner of the box and you
opened up the box and there was no girl. And they thought this was marvelous.
And it was a marvelous trick. Of course, she'd burned up.
But I call to your attention that you're auditing in
milder times than that. So when you say, "All right. Take a look at those
pyramids," remember to say, "Take a look at something else."
All right. Now, the auditor who is sitting there
doing TR 0 on the report or on the auditing sheet only—no TR 0 for the meter,
no TR 0, you see, for the preclear, no TR O for the room, and so forth; he's
got—TR 0 has advanced as far as the point of a ballpoint pencil, you see, and
he can write and he sometimes can even read an auditing command off a sheet but
doesn't pay much attention. Boy, the man's dangerous. Do you see why he's
dangerous?
He not only never finds out what's going on with the
pc but he never sees these instant reads in answers to his question. He never
clears these things. He never finds out what's going on. If something did go
on, he wouldn't do anything about it because he wouldn't think anything was
going on. All very fascinating
But the high arm is often, not always, but is often
cleared with withholds. You get a withhold off the case—any old cotton-picking
withhold, it doesn't matter at all, any withhold—and you'll see the arm start
down a little bit if it is a withhold to the pc.
Now, what makes it a withhold to the pc? Whether or
not it is against the mores that the pc has subscribed to. That is what makes
it a withhold. We can broaden this definition. We used to say, "Well, it
was a withhold if the pc thought it was a withhold."
All right. That's fine. But that's not technically
usable. Let's take a more usable statement: A withhold is a withhold if it is a
violation of a mores the pc has subscribed to and knows about.
In other words, you get a violation of a mores and
you got a withhold. In other words, if the withhold is a violation of a mores
it'll register on the meter, the pc will consider it a withhold, he will give
it to you as a withhold and he will feel better.
All right. Let's get down a little bit closer here.
Why do some people feel so wonderful when you get off some withholds and others
don't notice anything?
Why is this? Why is this apparently spotty? You sit
down and you say, "Have you ever robbed a bank?" And pc A—you say,
"Have you ever robbed a bank?" And he gets a tremendous fall and you
say to him "All right. When was that?"
Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha! And he says, "Well, that was
Chicago, 1931. We robbed a bank. There was La—Louie the Pits and a few of us
guys, and we robbed the bank and we—we got away wit da loot. And as a matter of
fact, we shot each other afterwards and threw da money in Lake Michigan and
then I was killed. Yes, I robbed a bank. I—I got a recollection on it,"
and so forth. And that's fine. And you expect the pc to grow wings at this
moment, you see, and so forth. He's gotten off a withhold. Oh—he wasn't withholding
it. Nothing happens with the pc.
He did get a fall. We don't know what the fall is
traceable to. We ask him now, "Did you ever rob a bank?"
And he says, "Nah," he says, "I never robbed any banks. Not any other
banks than that."
And you don't get any more reaction on the needle
and you say, "Well now, the pc should feel wonderful." But he
doesn't. "Well, it did fall. So he should feel wonderful." Well, no,
you see, robbing banks is not against the mores of bank robbers. And there
being so very few citizens who subscribe to law and order in Chicago, you
see—they're in the minority—that it doesn't make a mores. Quite the contrary.
Now, he might very well go into—get a terrific
relief on the thing You say, "Well, is there anything you've ever reported
to the police? Ha-ha-ha-haha-ha.
Have you ever reported anything to the police? Ha-ha-ha-ha! Hm? Hm? Hey? Have you ever reported anything to the
police?"
"Ooo-o-oh,"
he says, "that's really bad."
You got an instant read here. "Come on. Come
on. Come forth. What's this you reported to the police?" You know, good,
smooth ARC here.
And he says, "Well, I—I reported once my dog
had been lost." And the fall comes off the meter, and he feels wonderful.
You say, "What on earth is this? How
come?"
Same fellow, you see? He robs the bank, they shoot
each other up, they throw the loot—they don't even get the money—they throw the
loot into Lake Michigan, and so on. And this has been a terrific withhold and a
great unsolved crime of all time, and here it is. And he gets no relief. But
he reports a dog to the police and he says, "My, I'm certainly glad you're
auditing me. I'm getting such terrific results."
Well, that's because you're operating from one mores
and he's operating from another, as I've already talked to you about. Fantastic
isn't it?
Now, supposing we find out something about the pc's
past and we guess at what the mores of the various groups and societies he's
belonged to might have been. And we do a Security Check from this particular
level. We are always going to get some kind of a result. But this is a rather
stunt proposition. Is there a faster way to do this? Yes.
It's called Security Checking by Dynamic Assessment.
There is the most available body of life or segment of life, the most available
segment of life on which he has a reality, against which he could be security
checked. And you will miss, miss, miss, miss, miss if it all still seems
reasonable to you that he is sitting there in a body, part of a race, and so
forth and so on, and all these "I'm-supposed-to's" are all taking
place, and this is a social world and so forth. And you think this is all
ordinary and reasonable.
You forget. You forget that it's very unusual. A
thetan is sitting in a meat body in a culture of some kind or another that is
doing some weird, odd things of some kind. It is not usual. And you know, the
whole thing can be security checked out? Let's look at it from that weird
angle.
All right. Do a Dynamic Assessment. Here's the way
you do it. Dynamic Assessment is done, of course, to find the most needle
change of any one dynamic amongst the rest of them. It is done, really, by
change of pattern rather than largest fall or something like that. It is done
the same way you assess anything else.
Now, you can do a Dynamic Assessment by
Elimination—brand-new news for you. That improves Dynamic Assessment a bit. You
can assess by elimination. It'll leave you sitting there with one dynamic on
which he has some reality.
All right. What are the parts of that dynamic? And
we now are confronted with the task of composing a great many new Security
Checks. They will be the teen series. There will be check number 11, check
number 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18. And each one of those is subdivided, as
necessary to— let us say, second dynamic would be Form 12, family. That would
be A. So Form 12B would be something on the order of children. You see, you
already have a Child Security Check, but that should be its number.
And Form 12C, which would have to do with marital
sexual relations and what is—commonly passes for mores in the present society.
I think that's the total moral code, is contained in that narrow sphere.
Twelve D would have to do with unusual practices on
the second dynamic. And in other words, you can get a number of Security
Checks plotted out here. Of course, they go by the number of the dynamic. So
your 18, naturally, is a bunch of Security Checks—questions on the subject of
God. They're just religious Security Checks of some character or another. So
you have a whole bunch of these things.
"Have you ever blasphemed?" Okay? That
kind of—that kind of a Security Check. "Have you ever used paraphernalia
for other purposes?" "Have you ever used a church for any other
purpose than was intended?" You get the idea. You just dream up all of the
possibilities of misuse/abuse crimes that fitted into innumerable areas.
Of course, number 14 would be your species checks.
And that's pretty easy, but it probably subdivides.
And a Dynamic Assessment could be done for the
subdivision so that you could get not only the dynamic but you could also get
the subdivision of the dynamic and you could wind up with a proper Security
Check. But no exact form Security Check i8 ever going to do the whole job.
You're going to have to add your own questions to it as they may appear.
Your Dynamic Assessment directs you to that zone of
life on which the pc has most reality and, therefore, would consider he would
have the most crimes as it exists. You will find a pc all messed up on seven
dynamics and able to be security checked on the remaining dynamic. He's got
some reality on it, so he's done something
to it. He knows, you see, it's his withhold.
Now of course, Sec Check Form 11—none of these are
written. You're going to write them. Any time you're doing this and you're
asking questions, now, by golly, you write the question you ask down. And I
don't care how much little side time that you spend going off and grabbing off
somebody's folder and find out what you're supposed to run on them next week
and actually dream up a Security Check.
Make sure it stays in the folder and then we can go
back over these things and we will get some horrendous thinking on the subject.
Okay? And it makes a good show. As a matter of fact, some of you who are not
sec checking this week but who will be sec checking next week have in these
folders, right this minute out here, you have this type of Security Check to
do. And those which are security checking—will be security checking tonight—you
just run into it like a truck hitting a wall. You're going to open up the
folder and there it is, and you're going to see, "Well, do an eight
dynamic Security Check. Dream up the questions," it'll say. All right.
Well, dream them up. And you will find that you're getting off the case the
withholds that come nearest to this pc's locus
aberratus. And there he sits.
In doing Security Checking—let's get out to a higher
generality here on the subject itself—the trouble with Security Checking is
that the auditor is usually security checking from his viewpoint rather than
from the pc's viewpoint.
The auditor is security checking against what he thinks would be a crime in his own
view. And it is not a crime to the pc. So the auditor gets all upset because
this question should have worked, and he's got this bright, sweet, innocent
little thing sitting across from him—a little high-school girl—and she's
sitting there and she's saying, "Oh, yes. Well, I was raped in the third
grade, the fourth grade. As a matter of fact, raped several boys in the fifth
grade. Yeah, as a matter of fact, I'm having clandestine relations at the
present moment with my uncle, except when I'm down at the firehouse."
So he says, "Man, you know, when I get all this
off, when I get all this off and get all this straightened up, this girl going
to be flying right, you know?"
About three, four weeks after he's finished this
laborious task of Security Checking, he walks by the firehouse and she in her
negligee waves from the window. What he missed—what he missed was this, what he
missed was this: her dynamic was the—was the eighth dynamic, and she was a
renegade from the Temple of Astarte. And of course, it would have been a awful break of mores for her to have
done anything else.
Now, if he'd asked her questions such as "Have
you ever been leaning out a window and have not whistled- to somebody?" he
would have gotten a fall, and she would have gotten this off, maybe with
considerable grief. She meant to do right.
Now, the odd thing about thetans is they are
thetans. That is the oddest thing about a thetan. And a thetan is not natively
a member of any culture. There aren't just natural-born eighth dynamic thetans
and natural-born second dynamic thetans, and so forth. They are just thetans.
And they've come down the track by their own devious routes accumulating, in
their own peculiar way, civilizations, cultures, mores, group ideas and so on.
And some of them have come a long way down the track without finding out any
groups exist. And all sorts of wild things have gone on, you see? It's quite
weird, you see?
It isn't that everybody has the same body of
aberration at all. They're thetans. And in view of the fact that all the rest
of this stuff is collected, well, it's just what do they collect? Some collect
stamps, some collect blondes, some collect debts, some collect executions—sort
of a hobby.
But the various mores in which they operate are
registered very clearly and cleanly on the dynamics. And as soon as you start
doing this, why, you're going to see some interesting renewed upsurge results
out of Security Checking
Of course, I'm put to it right now. I have to have a
zone and level of auditing which is a comprehensible, highly usable, highly
workable level of auditing prior to finding the pc's goal and terminal. And I
have to do that fairly rapidly because you have a Class II Auditor and he has
to have a body of skills. So I'm not just busy inventing them, I'm busy
throwing them together.
It's like the other day, I looked up in horror in
realization that we had no co-audit processes of any kind whatsoever that could
be trusted in a co-audit. By the new safety table, I—you look it over from a
viewpoint of the co-audit, why, you're in a box. That's a bad spot. But there's
an old one, 1951, that could be run in a co-audit: Rising Scale Processing.
Probably be gorgeous! Probably be gorgeous. You can probably even do an
assessment on the people as they walk in. You know, I mean you could take the
old Chart of Attitudes and kind of work it out. What did this fellow want? He
tells the Co-audit Instructor what his goals are. All you had to do is pick out
the column, that's Rising Scale he runs. Hell make it.
It's quite a remarkable thing what you can do with
concepts and that sort of thing—leaving terminals alone—the gains you can get.
Now, in this body of Security Checking, here is a
whole zone of activity—a very simple zone. There will be forms developed for
this particular thing and all the Security Checks. We haven't got them all now
but that's no reason why I can't show you what it is or we can't use it, don't
you see? You, after all, don't have to be led down the road with your feet
being picked up one at a time and set down on the cobbles by somebody else.
Do a Dynamic Assessment, take the most active
dynamic, preferably by elimination, take the parts of existence which might be
the subdivisions of that dynamic; look those over and take the most active one
of those or the most fruitful one of those—just dream up a Security Check that
has to do with it.
Security Check the pc on that particular zone and
area. You will be asking him things he never dreamed of were an overt. He's
doing them all the time. And all of a sudden, "It's horrible! Oh,
God!" He feels terrible about that. And he is so relieved.
A vegetarian, for instance, that is also on the
fifth dynamic—she has other reasons that she could be a vegetarian—it might be
on the seventh or eighth dynamic. It's something they should be doing, you
know, because of some religious action or something of that sort.
But when a pc is on the fifth dynamic and
vegetarian, and we security check him, here's where your reasonableness will
get assaulted, you see? You're going to ask this person such things: "Have
you ever eaten an animal?" and the needle is going to fall off the pin.
And you'll find out he's been withholding every dinner he ever ate that had any
meat connected with it, and so on. All sorts of wild things here.
You ask somebody along this line that falls on the
fifth, "Well, have you ever walked on the grass?" Needle falls off
the pin. He's liable to explain to you that he had to. There wasn't any way you
could go around the grass. Of course, he realizes he smashed up a lot of grass
in his day.
You see, you look on this as being so ordinary, you
know, for people to walk on grass or kill plants or eat animals, or something
of this sort, or chop down trees or do various things on the fifth. This is all
so routine that you wouldn't think—bang! like that, that it would have any
effect on a case because it's too ordinary and shouldn't have any effect on the case. Well, that doesn't follow at
all.
What has an effect on a case is what has an effect
on a case, you see? What—it's what the thetan thinks is a withhold. And that
goes back to what group mores are you operating against?
Well, any member of the old biological survey that
was operating around here about six hundred million years ago has his hair
stand on end, whether he knows it or not, every time a new species becomes
extinct on Earth or every time man plows up another thousand square miles and
plants it in cute cottages at contractor prices, you see? That's grim. And his
hair stands on end. He knows it's very usual and that he ought to be doing it.
He knows he should be doing it, you see, because it's a usual thing to do. And
that's okay. And nobody else thinks it's bad.
But he looks at this or doing something like that
and he kind of—it's just not quite right. He doesn't quite integrate why it
isn't quite right. He doesn't think the thought through. He just sort of snarls
a little bit to himself quietly, or he thinks of it as an overt or something
and he's disturbed by it. Well, it's against the mores of the biological
survey. That's all.
"Thou shalt plant and populate planets,
pard." They kept the life cycle going and balanced. Also, I imagine any
one of them that ever gets in a schoolroom, and the teacher says, "Now we
are going to talk about the balance of nature," you see? And they go back
into the current biological nonsense about how there was a spontaneous
explosion of an atom somewhere in some sea of ammonia that got there by
accident, and then, by natural selection, and quite by accident, everything
got planned out this way, you see?
Well, a person that's been on that line is—somewhere
back in his bank, you know, things gonna go whirr, and whirr. Well, it's an
awful invalidation: the time he spent on computers figuring out how many petals
there should be on a delphinium! And of course, then they wog him. He finally
doesn't like this explanation, so goes over to the church and they tell him God
did it. And suddenly he begins to feel sort of megalomanic, you know? And
it's—"I wonder if I did create all these thetans." He didn't do
anything but run the computers that planned the posies on this particular type
of planet.
But you'll find these are overts. When they register
on that dynamic then you have to plot out what the overts would be on that
particular line; and you ask those questions, you'll find out the fellow has
got overts, he's got withholds and there he is. And he'll all of a sudden feel
much better. And some odd and peculiar things that he has been doing in his
life suddenly come straight. And he remembers things, and so forth.
You see, men are very often so busy being ordinary
that they don't recognize that every one of them is slightly, somewhere,
extraordinary. And this professional ordinariness that we get, particularly in
these socialistic times, is a great repressor. It not-ises the differences. And
unless you can reestablish difference, you can never reestablish
differentiation. You see, it's very easy to establish similarities and
identities. This is fairly easy to do. Man does this very well.
He just dismisses all problems by saying
"Everything is alike." You ever hear a girl that's had a bad love
affair? She says, inevitably, she
says, "All men are alike." That's her next statement. They walk
around, and she's liable to be saying something on this order for some days or,
well, hours anyway.
And—but she's done the easy way out. The way to
solve all of mankind is simply and ordinarily and only to say that they are
just all alike and that's it.
So you don't have to worry about it. And then the
next thing to do is if you want to—don't want to have to go any further or
exercise your wits any, all you have to do is say, "Well, they're all
bad." So the easy way to do is to say they're all alike and then all bad,
and therefore you're safe. And this is apparently a safe thing to do. You say,
"Well, they're all alike and all bad and, therefore, after this I will be
warned. And now I'm perfectly safe. Of course, I'm miserable but I'm perfectly
safe."
And a person will then try to justify this kind of
reasoning Well, that kind of reasoning is so idiotic and so simple and so
stupid and not-ises so many things that it's no wonder that countries cycle
down into some—the great melting-pot togetherness of it all. "Pigs are
more equal than others," you know? This kind of a—this kind of an
attitude.
It isn't that thetans are unequal, but it isn't that
they're equal either. Perhaps at the beginning of track this might have been
true. But they've been gathering inequalities for some time and then masking
them by pretended equalities until they're very hard to separate out.
Well, if you go ahead and look this over in Security
Checking, you'll find out that the Dynamic Assessment is a very marvelous way
to get a zone of life on which the person has overts and withholds. And you'll
find that that works fine, and produce some rather interesting results.
All right. There is another thing called the
Problems Intensive that we have been working on, and I'll tell you how to do
this Problems Intensive. It's a simple thing to do; nothing much to it.
It's a form. And you fill out the form. And the only
differences that you find from this and the first time I told you about it is
you don't run the problem. You fill out the form. You get all the
self-determined changes of the pc's lifetime. Then you assess those
self-determined changes, you find the one that reacts the most and then you ask
for the problem immediately earlier than that change. They give you a problem.
If it's the right change, they will give you a problem which is a tremendous
overwhelming problem that they have had for many, many years and that is their
present time problem of long duration. And they would recognize that as such
and that gets out of the road very nicely. The statement of it, of course,
makes it easier. But now there's a faster way of auditing it than running the
problem. A problem is too close to still to be audited swiftly. It isn't that a
problem can't be audited. A problem can be audited but it audits more slowly
than approaching it through motion.
In other words, it's close to a still, a problem is.
You ever notice a workman when he runs into two pieces of timber that are
going the wrong way in the structure: he stands back and looks at it. Yeah, he
inevitably stops. And problems are associated with stops.
So what you do is take it as a still point on the
track and find the area of prior confusion and then you sec check that area of
prior confusion. Find out what the person was doing at that time, find out what
he withheld and from whom and how he did it and what he did and why he said it.
And you know, that, you just find out all of the things and stuff in that
particular area which preceded the problem. And all the change in the problem,
all you do with the change he made in life and the problem is use them as a
milepost in time behind which you look for the confusion. And then you sec
check the confusion. And you'll find out, then, the problem will blow unless
it's gone back fifty thousand years and you're actually trying to sec check his
life as a student barbarian or something—which you can run into.
You get that area of confusion unraveled and you'll
find the problem blows, the change blows. And what do you know? It's usually
accompanied by a somatic of some kind, and it'll be some kind of a chronic
somatic, and that will lessen somewhat or sometimes even blow entirely. Don't
be disheartened after you've got the person a goals terminal, and you are running
him on the line, to have the somatic reappear where it really occurred on the
track. And it'll reappear and blow.
Now, Sec Checking, however, will alleviate and get
it out of the road and it usually stays out of the road, so—it stays lessened
anyway.
And so doing a Problems Intensive, then, merely
consists of finding all of the self-determined changes a person has made in a
lifetime, listing those, assessing those, finding that change which gives the
most reaction, finding the problem stated by the pc which existed immediately
prior to that change and then finding the area of prior confusion to the
problem. Find that area and sec check the living daylights out of that area.
What was he doing at that time? And who'd he know?
And all this sort of thing. And basically and principally, what did he do and what did
he withhold from whom?
Now, you don't have to do it person by person. You
actually can delete the assessment of the people in the list. You needn't do
that, there is no real point in it at all. You needn't make a list of people on
a Problems Intensive and then assess that list of people, because it's a
violation of a goals terminal.
What you should do is just go in on the basis of an
area of confusion, find out who was present in it and then find out to whom he did what and from whom he
withheld what. And all of a sudden
the problem in a majority of cases will blow. Now, that is a—you call that a
Problems Intensive, you see?
Now, a dynamics—Sec Checking by Dynamics is an
entirely different activity and it is an isolated activity of its own. And a
Problems Intensive is an isolated activity of its own. These things are
distinctly different activities.
Sec Checking usually depends for its workability on
the ability of the auditor to ask the right question at the right time. Now,
when we're making the basic class of a very functional type of auditor—I mean,
an auditor that we would depend on the skill of, that basic Class II
Auditor—we're not going to say that the Class II Auditor is a muzzled auditor,
and so on and so on, you see, the way we used to say there was a class. Class
II is above that. This person has got to have enough imagination to ask the
right questions and put together the right questions in order to knock apart
this mess; that'd give him enough to think about. And you have to be very good
at it. As a matter of fact, several members of this particular class are extremely good at this. I'm very
interested in watching it occur. "So we found the hidden confusion and
that was the end of the problem." You know? Bang Bang - Doing it very
well.
Now, what's interesting is, is that you could sec
check out of existence every out-rudiment. Isn't that interesting You could
take the room and you could take the present time problem, you could take the
auditor, you could take the ARC break, and naturally the withhold, and you
could sec check out of existence all of these out-rudiments by just asking for
the prior confusion. You find the rudiments out so you find out what went on
before it.
You see, a rudiment can't hang up unless there's an
unknown in it and an unknown can't exist unless there is a withhold.
These people who walk around being fond of being
stupid should get wise to themselves because all they're doing is declaring
that they have withholds. Here we have a class of thing which is all of a—all
of a piece: unknowingness, forgettingness, withholdingness and stupidity.
These all go together. These are all of a class. They are not the same thing
but each one interdepends on another. It's kind of another triangle like we
used to have in ARC and still have. But unknown and stupidity and withholds go
up and down accompanying one another. They are hand in glove. The more
withholds a person has the more stupid he'd be; the more unknowns he will have.
And you've got these three things just marching up and down beside each other.
And as you improve a person's withholds, if they're actually withholds, of
course he will get brighter.
But if you think you're going to take a member of
the Bank Robbers Security League and sec check him on a churchman's moral code
and wind up with an increased IQ, of course, you're quite mistaken. This will
not occur.
What you've got to do is sec check within the
reality of what the pc is and what the pc has done. You have to sec check
within that reality.
Well, there is one method of finding the zone by
dynamics, and another method: zones of action by change. That is the Problems
Intensive.
Well, the hidden confusion was when he was in
school. All right. Now, that is not anything but a school mores. It couldn't be
anything but school mores. It is not familial mores, particularly; it's school
mores. The confusion immediately before this change that you assessed out was
going to school. So therefore it's a school mores. It's a schoolboy's attitude
toward the parents; a schoolboy's attitude, you see, toward teachers; a
schoolboy's attitude toward all the other aspects of existence. Well, what are
these, what are these? And what's the morals? What's the mores of a school?
"Thou shalt not give the headmaster an even break," you know? It's
the thousand-odd commandments of the schoolboy. "Thou mustn't peach. Thou
mustn't inform on thy worst enemy." All kinds of weird moral codes, one
kind or another. "Thou shalt take revenge." It's quite weird, you
know? Somebody was mean so therefore all the other boys enforce the fact that
there must be a fight.
You know, it's quite weird. But 80 is any of these
moral codes. And if you're living comfortably, ensconced in a sort of a even,
easy-go sort of a society, and you'd say, "Well, I know what's moral:
'Thou shalt not, thou shalt not and thou shalt not and thou shalt not,' and
that's about all there is to it. And, of course, I am a moral person."
That is the emptiest remark that anybody ever made. "I am a moral
person." There isn't any other kind.
It doesn't make him a well-behaved person, except in
one group: the group that happens to have the same morals. See that, and then
he's a well-behaved person only in that group. It's very interesting The auditor's
viewpoint can be thrown out. The auditor can sec check securely from the fact
of the Presbyterian church and then with what amazement discover that nobody
but Presbyterians ever lives by the Presbyterian church. Always discovers this
with some shock. And never under any circumstances realizes there's a moral
code amongst marijuana addicts. See, so that is immoral.
Well look, it's only immoral to those groups that
have a moral code that says what the other side is doing is bad.
I'm not now trying to tear down and rip to pieces
every single moral code that has ever been developed anywhere. As a matter of
fact, we have the only means that has ever been discovered of straightening
them out. I don't know how anybody can be a Presbyterian after having been a
Roman Catholic for fifteen hundred years. If the Presbyterian church was
smart, if it was very, very clever, why, it would come around and find a bunch
of us auditors and get us to sit down with our E-Meters and put the
congregation up the line out of the moral area that they are stuck in so that
then they will hear something of what the preacher is saying. I think it's a
waste of air and church heat and a few other things. He's standing up there and
he's ranting and pounding the pulpit and telling them they must not sin. And
just think of this fellow who is totally stuck in the
Never-Give-a-Planet-an-Even-Break Space Jockeys Protective Association.
And here's this preacher ranting at him, "Thou
shalt not sin. You must learn to become a moral person."
And something in the back of his mind says,
"You know, I don't want to kill any more women. And this fellow is
standing up there demanding that I kill women. And that is why I left the Space
Jockey Protective Association because it was just too much—just one too many
women. Now, why does the Presbyterian church want me to kill women?" This
is what goes in crosswise, you see, in the reactive bank. And the fellow is
very puzzled about Presbyterianism. And he can't articulate what it is and he
can't understand about it. He just thinks that, well, it's not quite for him.
And if you ask him about it, almost on a flash
response, "What does a Presbyterian church want you to do?"
"They want me to steal ships and kill
women." And even he at this point looking at that would say, "You
know, that's peculiar." Because they don't want him to commit sin.
If you raved and ranted at a large group of people
with great force and decibels of sound that they must not sin, that they must
be moral people, and never at any time held up what you were talking about or
defined morals or showed them any moral code or anything—you just collect them
at random and then just start screaming at them that they mustn't sin, they
mustn't be immoral, so on—people would walk out of there and do some of the
weirdest things.
You should realize that there is no act pronounced
immoral in any one part of Earth which cannot be found to be moral in some
other part of Earth. So remember that, when you are doing Security Checking.
Security check against the moral code of the prior confusion.
And, well, if your prior confusion, let us say, is a
period after the person has been an auditor for years and it's a big confusion
and it has something to do with auditing in an organization or something like
this—there was a big confusion at this time, and after that he changed
something or other, and that's the confusion you assessed, and that is the
confusion that you are security checking. And you've learned that in his early
life he was a Presbyterian or something You know he's probably crossed up one
way or the other. But probably the code he has gone against is the code he
understands to be the code of a Scientologist—not the written Code of the
Scientologist. The written Code of the Scientologist is not the code of a Scientologist, oddly enough. It i8 simply
something that is held up as a—as some kind of a model of action to keep us
from getting our heads kicked in. But we have developed quite a structure of
morality, you know? "Thou shalt not audit badly." That's one of the
foremost of them.
"Thou shalt not audit a pc with a PT
problem"—it goes off into technical things, don't you see? And it—so on. A
person, actually, is getting into a moral structure. He's not into a technical
structure; he's also into a moral structure. And by sec checking him, you will
find out that he thought of it as a moral structure. That was a moral structure
to him. You look on it as a technical structure, but no, it's a moral
structure.
He knew very well, he knew doggone good and well,
that he shouldn't keep auditing this person badly after 3:30 A.M. He just knew
he shouldn't ought to be doing that because it was against all of his
principles: what he wanted to do and what anybody else wanted him to do. and so
forth—it was just bad. Pc was getting tireder and tireder and tireder and
practically finally spun in. This gets to be a hell of an overt.
Somebody walks into the front room and swears and
damns and screams and raises the devil about something or other and practically
knocks the person's lease to pieces, don't you see? And you get that as an
overt amongst Scientologists? You don't get it as an overt until they find out
that they disturbed an auditing session that was going on. You see? All right.
They disturbed this auditing session. Well, that's an overt. Something they
shouldn't have done.
So gradually out of technical lines and out of
behavior actions and group associations, Scientologists are building a moral
code of what they consider proper behavior. And it's built exactly and entirely
against their experience, not what they've been told or what they've been
dictated to. It's built against the experience of what they know to be survival
and what they know to be nonsurvival. So you see, you check against that moral
code one way or the other.
Now, you have a Security Check for an auditor. Now,
whether it embraces all those points or not is debatable at the moment; I
haven't got the thing to hand. Possibly it doesn't.
But you see, you're in the driver's seat if you're
security checking a Scientologist. You see, that's easy. That's nothing to it.
Just all you have to do is say, "Well, what would I consider wrong?"
You see, "As an auditor, what would I consider wrong? Well, all right.
I'll ask him if he's done it."
"You ever disturb an auditing session? You ever
done this? You ever done that? You ever written a nasty letter to Ron and
couldn't get it back out of the post?" See, anything, anything, you just
bing, bing and think those up, just bang! bang! bang! That's because, you see,
you're auditing in the same sphere of the moral code.
Now, let's move it just one out. You're security
checking a person who is your fellow countryman and who has gone to similar
schools to you, and so forth. Well, this is pretty easy. You know what you'd
consider wrong so you can ask him what's wrong, and bang—you'll get all kinds
of withholds and so forth, and that's dandy.
All right. Let's move it out just a little bit
further. You're a member of the human race and you're checking—security
checking a member of the human race. Well, you get past the language
difficulties; you could dream up a security thing. You could—you know, you know
enough about it—vaguely, other races and things—and you could dream up
something Even if it was only "Have you ever done something that a
Chinaman would consider immoral?" You know, you had to be that stupid
about it but you could still brace it in somehow or another here and get it
through.
All right. Now, let's security check a monkey. Well,
what do monkeys consider moral? What do they consider immoral? I don't know. I
haven't talked to one lately. But they go on a monkey code. They must have one
because they all behave alike as a species. Don't they? Well, they must have a
moral code of some kind or another which is a racial code of some kind.
All right. How about security checking a blade of
grass? I can show you that a tomato will register. I can show you that a
cabbage will register on an E-Meter. Well, the only problem there is not just how to get in communication
with the cabbage? See, that's not the
major problem. That's not the only major
problem. The other major problem would be well, "What does a cabbage
consider immoral?" That's from a Security Checker's viewpoint. I imagine
"Not to be eaten," or something You never know about these things.
The basis of which you operate must be the viewpoint
of the pc, not the viewpoint of the auditor—the only point I'm trying to make
here. You must— you must security check from the viewpoint of the pc, always.
Doesn't mean you've got to be in his 'ead, but it means you've got to do some
dream-up.
All right. If this person was a WRAC, was a WRAC for
years, and the incident you're security checking and the zone of confusion—the
prior confusion that you're security checking—finds that she has been a WRAC
for some years. What is the moral code of a WRAC? Who knows? Well, you could
ask some questions about it. You could dream it up.
"Have you ever spoken pleasantly to your
commanding officer? Have you ever failed or refused to make catty remarks about
a sergeant?" See? Who knows what their moral code is? But it might be
immoral, see, it might be immoral to apparently be on good terms with your
sergeant.
See? It might be. All kinds of wild things might be
going on. You're not sure, because there are different standards of survival.
And the standards of survival can be so different that there it is. It's laid
out in front of you. Your work is cut out for you.
But you always—the rule is, you always security
check within the moral structure of the pc, not the auditor. You never security check within the moral
structure of the auditor. You just make a damn fool of yourself if you do that.
You sound like a parson yapping You've got a moral code. Well, what's so moral
about it? I don't know. But there it is. You got a moral code.
Now, all moral codes tend to propagate themselves
and people try to force other people into a moral code within a group, and so
on. So an auditor does have a latent impulse to force some old moral code of
his off on the pc while he is security checking. It's perfectly all right to
force any moral code you want to on anybody, but not while you're security checking You security check by the moral
code the pc has violated and you'll get some terrific case gains. You'll get
that tone arm coming down, and so on.
Well, I've given you two excellent methods of doing
this; they're very, very good: your Problems Intensive to find areas of
confusion; your Dynamics Assessment followed by a Security Check along that
particular dynamic line. I think you will find these things are quite
productive of interesting results.
The question very often comes up, extremely,
"Well, aren't you just running perpetual withholds, withholds, withholds,
withholds? Aren't you running withhold on the Prehav Scale?" No. It never
flattens; it's one of these total duration. If you've asked somebody,
"Have you withheld anything from George? Have you withheld anything from
George? Have you withheld anything from George? Have you withheld anything
from George?" Yes, that will flatten and that will run out. But "Have
you ever in the last two hundred trillion years restrained a communication or
restrained a reach or restrained anything Have you ever done this?" I'm
afraid would take a long time to flatten.
Now, it is much more rapidly flattened if you say,
"Have you ever overtly acted against or withheld yourself from some moral
code that—?" so on. Now, we've got what his real withholds are. We can get
those out. So it flattens as fast as you've cleaned up all the moral codes
which he has violated.
How many groups has he belonged to? I don't know.
It's an inexhaustible amount. Fortunately, you don't have to do it that
particularly to get a good result.
Now, there's one thing more here and that is the
subject of the use of "blame," the use of "make guilty," in
Security Checking and the ways of doing that. And there's one more item: is the
use of critical thoughts in Security Checking.
Blame has nothing to do with a Security Check. Just
forget it. It's just a part of the Prehav Scale. It comes under the heading of
irresponsibility, by the way, not under the heading of overts and withholds. To
"make guilty"—I notice there's a tendency to ask people if they have
ever blamed anybody as a Security Check and so forth. And this just doesn't
exist. It isn't anything. It's nowhere.
Now, if you ask somebody "Have you ever made
anybody guilty of ?" and Security Check question—if you ask that bluntly
just like that, your chances of getting a factual answer are something on the order
of a roulette wheel in Las Vegas. There it is. Because the thing that is wrong
with your pc is that he or she has never really succeeded in making anybody
guilty of anything, anytime, and they are still trying. And the basis of their
aberration is the effort to make
others guilty, not the fact of accomplished guilt. You always use "tried to make guilty," "attempted to make guilty."
Such words as that must modify this "made guilty."
"Have you ever attempted to make anybody guilty
of rape?" That's a perfectly proper
Security Check question.
"Have you ever made anybody guilty of
rape?" Well, this is Las Vegas. This girl and—I don't know, she's been
raped by the firemen, the police; she's been raped by most anybody and
everybody, and just been raped for years. And all during this period of time,
she has been saying, "You beast! You dog. Get thee hence. Take thy dark
shadow away from my doorstep" and other equivalent remarks, less ladylike,
in an effort to make fellows guilty. And she has never succeeded in doing it.
And you ask her, "Have you ever made anybody
guilty of rape?"
Well, this is nonsense. No, she never has. That is
the answer and that's the reaction you'll get on the needle. No, she never has.
Tried for years. Never succeeded yet.
But you ask, "Have you ever tried to make anybody guilty?" Ahhh, well. Now, that's a guilt of
another hue. And you'll find your tone arm is reacting to that one. It can go
up and down and back and forth. Do you realize that the only reason anybody has
a victimish, motivatorish attitude is just an effort to make somebody guilty.
But remember, it's only an effort to
make somebody guilty. It is not successfully having done so.
Now, you can actually produce a considerable change
of mental attitude on the part of a pc by saying, "Now, all right, get the
idea of your mother and father standing in front of you and saying they're so sorry, and then have them fall away
and die. Thank you." And the person will just cheer up.
There's a tremendous effort to accomplish that exact
end. There's a tremendous effort. Everybody has it. It's not singular. They've
got something they wanted to make somebody guilty about and they haven't ever
made it. And it's still hung on the track.
So it's always "try
to make guilty," it is always "attempted
to make guilty." It is always a modifying word of that character and
it is never, "Have you ever made so-and-so
guilty?"
You ask a judge in sessions. You take him and you
say, "All right, judge," and you put him on the E-Meter. And you say,
"All right. Now, judge, we're going to find out if you ever made a
prisoner guilty." And it gets no fall. Man, he has been sentencing them to
be hanged, he has been sentencing them to prison, he's been banishing them out
of the society, he's been shooting them from guns for years and years and
years. Why, they've been sent to Old Bailey and Wormwood Scrubs, and here they
go. And he's never, in his estimation,
succeeded in making one feel guilty.
They always have the insouciance as they walk out the door, "Well, I really
didn't do it," you see? "And he's just a dog. And somehow or another,
I will bear up with all this," see?
He's always got this as his image: he didn't succeed
in making the fellow guilty. He pronounced sentence. You say, "Have you
ever pronounced sentence?"
He will also say, "Yes. Oh yes, I've pronounced
sentence, pronounced sent ." You probably won't get any fall on the meter
either. That's what he's supposed to do. Pronounce sentence.
But you say, "Have you ever tried to make a prisoner guilty?"
The thing will fall off its pin. Just run by the hour.
You just—well, how many prisoners do you want? Just
one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, oh, Joe and Pete and Roy and
masses, masses and masses of prisoners. Because every time one of these ones
would come up accused of some very hideous crime, he didn't think his
punishment was adequate half the time or he didn't think the person would
experience it in any way, and he's busy pounding with the gavel and screaming
at the fellow, "Hang him by the neck until he's dead, dead, dead!"
And the prisoner looks at him, you know, and goes kind of white and walks away.
All the judge gets is a reaction after that, that somebody won't speak to him
now.
See, the fact of making the other fellow guilty may
have been accomplished, but the person seldom finds out about it. May have been
accomplished. But what he does know for sure is that he attempted to.
You could get a great deal of response, but it's
always "try" and "attempt."
Now, another little point I'd like to bring up about
Security Checking is a debatable one—this isn't a clear-cut point: whether or
not you should ever take an unkind thought as an overt.
I say it's debatable just for this reason: that
sometimes it's the only thing that is available on the pc. Apparently you can
find nothing else, but they thought an unkind thought about somebody and that
was an overt and they withheld it, and it sort of frees up. And it—a few of
these gotten off will make the person feel more friendly and so on. Yes, there's
some reaction to it.
But apparently—and this is not on my own
observation—but apparently, there is evidence to the effect that a person with
a body of unkind thoughts against something or somebody has an actual overt
which he is wi- or she is withholding underneath those unkind thoughts. And
just like you see a little flag waving above the powder mine, you go along and
flutter at the flag, you see, and you don't pay any attention to the mine, you
just don't get anything done about it, you know? You just monkey with the flag,
you know? "Well, I had an unkind thought." So you make the flag wave
a little bit more, you know? And factually, there's a powder mine there.
And you say, "What have you got underneath this
here critical, unkind thought?"
"Nothing. I have been a pure, honest, good
Samaritan, washing my feet properly morning, noon and night, and drying it in
my wife's hair. I've been doing all the moral things I should be doing"
(you'd be surprised how many moral things there are), "and I have never
done anything in my whole life to that person and I have no withholds of any
kind."
Well, there's little plumes—there's a couple little
openings we're going to have to put in up here when we start this type of
Security Checking to let the smoke out of the E-Meter because it's going to
react.
So there is evidence to the effect that if you get
some unkind thoughts, you ought to whistle up for the bulldozers and the cranes
and the big grab hooks to reach in and find out what the devil the overt is
because the unkind thought is apparently the indicator which shows that an
overt and a withhold exist. And if you audit unkind thoughts in Security
Checking as themselves, you are doing the same thing as leaving a Security
Check question unflat.
So this is another reason, apparently, why a pc can
be given a Security Check, and they get off a lot of unkind thoughts, unkind
thoughts, and then all of a sudden, why, the needle gets all gummy, and they
just don't feel so good and they aren't so good, and so forth.
Well, actually, the unkind thoughts were indicators.
The little flag was waving in the breeze, and the auditor never really asked a
comprehensive question such as, "What
have you done to William?"
"Nothing"—thooong.
"What was that? What are you withholding from
William?"
"Nothing Nothing but his inheritance and his
wife and all of his baggage and a few things like that," you see?
But it comes up as "Well, I thought William's
tie wasn't so nice today, so that's a big overt." Actually, those things
are not sufficiently important. They are not adequate to aberrate anybody; they
won't do much for a case. But they are indicators. And there are several things
in life which are these little indicators and something big lies under them.
Now, it isn't necessarily true, though, that the pc
can get to it at his state of case now. It's something that you could kind
of—you may not even get a reaction on it on the meter. It's too unreal to the
individual, see? But a little X across over in the border on the Security Check
indicates to you that sometime, someday this pc is going to come up the line
and then you're going to find out, "Well, William . . ."
Well, actually, he didn't do anything to William,
really. But when William was dead broke and didn't have any train fare, he made
him walk from London to East Grinstead. And when he got to East Grinstead, and
so forth, had made sure that the place that was going to employ him had a bad
reference on him. Yet he hadn't done anything to him, you know? And it was in
the rain. And he got pneumonia and died. Otherwise, he's done nothing to
William. But pcs are not good at facing up to overts, so they miss them in that
particular character.
All right. Well, there you are, and I hope this
gives you some more data, some more interesting insights in Security Checking.
But remember that Security Checking belongs in the category of metering. And
unless you operate the meter, Security Checking is a very dangerous pastime,
and I wouldn't attempt it if I couldn't run a meter.
Thank you very much.