The proper programing for the HELOTROBUS IMPLANTS (in the 40 trillions ago) which contain “Heaven” is:
It is important not to run engrams if you can’t. You’ll just confuse the pc. And it’s important not to run engrams hard or through too many times before getting off the first series.
The implants are important. They are the charge that must be removed from the case. Three techniques are used to accomplish all this:
If you can’t do (1) and (2) then do only (3) and omit the balance of the program except Vestibule Implants, GPMs and End RIs.
The other actions of dating and engram running make it easier to run the implants.
But running the implants is the thing.
Less than three hours should be consumed in dating and other actions than finding RIs in the implants.
When a case has been properly programed as above, by the time you have run the first three or four goals, if you do them well with 3N, exactly on the form line plot, you will encounter a “difficulty.”
The RIs begin to discharge so fast that once the pc in session has said them, they do not again RR when the auditor says them. They have blown.
This will only happen when the pc’s visio has turned up well on the implant stairways, and the RRs are wide and free as the pc says them.
This changes none of the patter of R3N except saying something rocket read. One uses past tense of “read”: “That rocket read.”
I can visualize a pc flying up tone to where this happens and the auditor nagging because there’s no second read when the auditor calls it. How can it? It’s gone — blown.
By further rise in tone and with far more charge off, I can envision a pc racing along in session blowing RIs by inspection. Well, it’s observable when it happens that the whole of every RI’s charge is blowing. In such a case an auditor can further shorten the 3N patter in the interest of speed.
But realize that the auditor’s job, the auditor’s ethics demand, whatever the pc’s attitude, that THE AUDITOR’S JOB IS TO GET THE FULL CHARGE OFF EVERY RI.