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ENGLISH DOCS FOR THIS DATE- Creative Admiration Processing (LGC-6) - L530110h | Сравнить
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CONTENTS CREATIVE ADMIRATION PROCESSING Cохранить документ себе Скачать
London Group Course Lectures, LGC-6London Group Course Lectures, LGC-5

CREATIVE ADMIRATION PROCESSING

THE PROCESSING OF GROUPS BY CREATIVE PROCESSING

Alternate Title:
Mock-up, Certainty, Group Processing.
Alternate Title: Creative Processing
A lecture given on 10 January 1953A lecture given on 10 January 1953
According to the Flag Master list, this was given on Jan 15, 1953, but that is after LRH began the PDC Supplement lectures in London (which started on Jan 12), so the R&D date of Jan 10 is probably correct.According to the Flag Master list, this was given on Jan 13, 1953, but that is the day after LRH began the PDC Supplement lectures in London (which started on Jan 12), so the R&D date of Jan 10 is probably correct.
[Based on R&D transcripts.][Based on R&D transcripts. The first portion of this lecture, up to the point marked, was included at the end of the old reel for LGC-4 and has been checked against it.]


All right, This is the sixth lecture, and the lecture here is Creative Admiration Processing, I'm going to give you a brief rundown on this subject and on mock-ups in general, What is a mock-up? The word mock-up is military in origin, It has this characteristic: During the war they would very often stage a battle or stage a landing or something of the sort, and they would build actual sets with which to make this stage, And these sets would be called mock-ups, and that meant that they weren't actual. Well now, to some degree the word mock-up is unfortunate in that it is actual, but - a mock-up is actual, Now, the point here is that the word describes a special thing. It is not, really, an idea; it is not something one imagines, It is an item, it is an object.

All right, Let's go in now into the fifth lecture, "The Processing of Groups by Creative Processing."

But let's get that very clear right there as an important datum, A mock-up is an object. It is an item. It exists at a finite distance from the preclear. It is of a finite size, It has an identity and it has a location in space and time. You can actually mock up in the past, the present or the future. You want the mock-ups in the present or in the future, not in the past, really.

A Group Auditor is one who audits groups. There's much to know, by the way, about Group Auditing, which is not in this course and which is not terribly germane.

But in Self Analysis, to be on the safe side, we mock it all up past tense. That will run out the whole track. That's because it hits the people who are sure they only have mock-ups in the past, they only have terminals in the past They know they've got a past, so they can put a mock-up in the past.

There is such a thing as running a group as a group just to run the engrams out of it. You have a club; the club isn't getting along well. Well, you could actually find out why it wasn't getting along well and process it as an organism. And you'd find that it had some reactive computation about somebody or something in a club, and you would run this out and everybody would he in good shape. Now, that's actually very interesting as a subject.

You will find, gradually, if you were looking into their minds, their mock-ups would drift first in the past, in the past, in the past, and then they would drift forward into present, a little more into the present. The next thing you know, they would be having mock-ups right up here, you see, right here in the room with them. And then the next thing you know, they'd kind of be mocking into the future and into their own space.

There is such a thing as communication lines. A Group Auditor - there s a book on this and a lot of data on this: communication lines in an organization, what they do to aberrate it and not aberrate it. A Group Auditor should know something about that.

But each time that mock-up has a finite location in space and time. It, at its optimum, is a three or more dimensional picture in full color, sound, motion and with all other perceptics present, and with a solidity one could perceive as superior to the solidity which he perceives to exist in the MEST universe. That one is an optimum mock-up.

He can find out all this, really, though. He can figure this out from Self, Self Analysis and the scales there, because all of those problems resolve by Creative Processing of groups as groups. If you just get the group there and you give them Creative Processing out of Self Analysis or special lists, and that group is going to come back to battery, and whatever is wrong with that group is going to right. That's simple, then, see!

And a really optimum mock-up would be all those things, and have a persistence such that it would stay there after you had mocked it up and go on acting of its own volition, and other people would see it. Now, that would be a mock-up to end all mock-ups. All right.

So the Group Auditor - the Group Auditor doesn't have to have a terrific amount of technology at his fingertips beyond the basic knowledge of Dianetics and the theory and delivery of Creative Processing.

Then we're dealing with a specific object, an item and thing here when we're dealing with a mock-up. We're not dealing with just an idea, pictures, something of the sort.

You take a group, a club, it isn't getting along well, it has a big engram, it's stuck on that engram. Now, you could go in and run out that engram, really, actually could find it, run it out, so forth. But it would take you much longer than to simply go in and give them a half an hour of Self Analysis. Because you're giving them a flock of new terminals, and they're all doing the same thing, and therefore they feel a unity amongst themselves and they'll forget about that engram. That engram will run itself out, more or less.

You'll find out from individual to individual there's tremendous variation, tremendous behavior. One of them mocks something up and it goes off erratically and does this and that and other things, and he doesn't control it at all. Well, the trick is to get the mock-up as good as possible and under as full and analytical control as possible with the least possible use of energy. Now, you want - you want this mock-up under full control, you want it in a specific position, you want the person to be able to move it, place it, so on.

The action of the Group Auditor is to appoint and supervise, one after the other, people to deliver mock-ups, Creative Processing to a whole group, or to do it himself. Now, that's his action.

You'll find out most people, wog people have mock-ups which are two-dimensional; they're flat and gray, or they're mocking up in black space, or they're doing this with the mock-up or doing that with the mock-up. Well, fortunately we can change the characteristics of a mock-up now as easy as you can change your hat. Let it sink in for a moment. Just because people get these various mock-ups is no reason they can't be changed in characteristic. A mock-up's characteristics can be changed almost at will by an auditor, simply by getting the preclear to admire the imperfections.

Now, his action is also to take the group apart into its sections, if necessary, and occasionally, very occasionally, pick up one of his people in the group, or two or six in one of the specialer - more special groups, and just bring them up to parity so they can be poured in with the main group.

"Get a mock-up." "Got it?" "All right," "What's wrong with it?" "Admire that," A fellow getting a mock-up in black space - "Admire that blackness." A fellow getting a mock-up - he can mock up women, but he never gets a woman with a face - "Admire that fact she doesn't have a face." Admire that facelessness, and faces will appear. And in such a way by admiring these imperfections, you can monitor and change the quality of mock-ups at will.

So he does have to do some individual processing, but that individual processing is contained exactly in the pages of Self Analysis and consists of just individualized delivery of the same thing. So we don't change this. It's just the fact that we've got to deliver it vis-a-vis. And the individual to whom it's being delivered is - something wrong that he isn't getting any benefit from the general processing. Something on that order. Now, you could carry that to too much of an extreme, as I will cover in a moment.

Now, to remedy blackness on a mock-up - blackness means just blackness. Actually, it'll appear to be something that people think something was in blackness, because blackness is so capable of having something in it. And they don't know for sure, so they just guess there is something in it. It's safer to have something in it than to doubt it has something in it, so we'll put something in it, so we'll say there's a blackness exists. Sometimes you'll get blackness flowing away from an individual, and it'll flow and flow and flow and flow and flow. There's no flow of blackness, but it'll flow anyway.

Now, the selection of mock-ups from these processing lists have to be adapted to his group. You take Self Analysis and without any judgment at all simply read off everything on every list to a group of children of six, and you're going to start missing. You'll miss badly.

Now, we get to people who are admiring how black it all is, and the darnedest things will occur to that blackness. Now, there's another method of remedying that, and that is to run what we call a bracket dichotomy on it, because preventing admiration, preventing admiration is black. When you see blackness, you know admiration is prevented.

So while they're getting the last mock-up, you just look down the list and pick up the next one that a child could get. That's a simple thing. Or you use a special list for children. But just use your selection on this. And the people you have reading those lists, advise them the same thing. They've got to select their mock-up. In other words, it requires some judgment on his case.

The second that somebody tells you, "Look, I've got a lot of blackness," you say to yourself right there this fellow is present - preventing admiration, not only in the past but in present time. How's he doing it? Who cares. All he has to do, if you're running him on flows, is get him to prevent admiration from flowing. Just do that.

Now, the next thing that he must judge, of course, is the speed of mock-up, the speed of delivery. How fast does he hand them out? Does he hand them out at a rate which includes the last and slowest? No, he hands them out at a fairly average rate that hits the middle. It is the average of the group he's after, he isn't after the slowest member. And that's important. That's tough; it's just tough if somebody is so slow that they can't get this, that they can't get these mock-ups before he gets the next one. He can make some sort of a special arrangement. He can say, "Well, you get every other one" or something like that to this person. He shouldn't slow down the whole group to its slowest member. Man has been doing that for too long.

Just ask him, "Now, let's get the idea of preventing the admiration from flowing," "Preventing something from being admired. That's right," "Now protect something from admiration," "Now hide something so it won't be admired," This is subzero Tone Scale, bracket dichotomy, That's Professional Course stuff. I'm just giving it to you at this point, but there's other ways of handling this.

Now his reading, then, can be varied by giving the actual perceptions at the bottom of the page on these lists in Self Analysis, or by simply saying, "All right, now admire your mock-up. Now get the mock-up admiring you once in a while. Now get others admiring the mock-up."

The next thing you know, everything will turn blazingly white on him and practically knock his block off. And he'll say, "Gee-whiz, there's - there's ... There - there - there's - there's dogs, and there there's - there's my dog, Bingo. And - and there's this one and there's that one and there's Papa and there's Mama and there's - there's my schoolteacher and there's this one and, gee! How did all these people get here?"

Now remember that then there are three possibles here. And that's he admiring his own mock-up, the mock-up admiring him - four possibles - others admiring his mock-up (he just mocks up some more admiring his mock-up) and the mock-up admiring others, just get that feeling like the mock-up is admiring others. There's four possibilities there. You can use those then on a list. The most important ones are his admiring the mock-up, the mock-up admiring him. There's your two-terminal flow.

And you say, "Now, we're not interested in that. Just get a mock-up there, and prevent it from being admired,"

You'll find out that he'll get upset if you have others admiring his mock-up because too many times in the past, way back when and so forth, he sort of has the feeling like once upon a time he'd made mock-ups and people would steal them, or somebody is liable to get this mock-up, somebody is liable to grab it, And you'll throw all that into restimulation if you have too many others admiring the mock-up.

"Now, there's my first wife, my second wife, my third wife, my sixth wife, my eighth wife, Gee!" That's blackness.

And when the mock-up admires others, look out. Because that is Mama only paying attention to Papa when junior is present. And he can't get on that communication line at all. And you'll get the mock-up looking sideways then, and all of a sudden, you'll have a child or a veteran or a hospitalized case will be breaking down and crying or having bad somatics or something of this sort. And so you'll just use the obvious ones most of the time. And the obvious ones are simply his admiring the mock-up, the mock-up admiring him.

The second you spot blackness you know somebody is preventing admiration from... Well, when I say preventing admiration from flowing, he's just preventing flowing. So you know he's stuck on the time track. Why? Because to get up to present time on the time track, you've got to unstick a person, and he's going to stick unless he's got some grease. And what's grease? That's admiration.

Now, the horrible part of being a Group Auditor, if he is doing all of the auditing himself, is the fact that he's acting as an outflow terminal and he's trying to sort of - if he's auditing children, he's trying to hold them down. He's trying to sit on them long enough to get them to make something mocked up and keep them from disturbing others and so forth.

He can't get terminals because he hasn't got anything to let terminals flow, and his lack of that particle will keep him from flowing. It's very interesting. Very good manifestation, so on “I”.

And he's right there reading away: "All right. Now, create a scene of Mickey Mouse." Here's little Oswald over there jumping up and down, you know, and going back and forth and making noise. And he knows that Bertram over on this other side is terribly disturbed by all this, and so he has a tendency to put a screen between Oswald and Bertram, you see, and hold Oswald down! Now, he's actually doing this with beams.

Well, you're not too interested in this as a Group Auditor. But don't get downhearted if you have your class - the can'ts - segregated out and you have to process them.

The Group Auditor doesn't realize this till it's called to his attention. But he's actually mocking up particles and putting them on these people and holding them down and putting up actual screens, and he's doing all sorts of things. And one of these days when you start processing him, you're going to wonder what these great big, solid masses are that he's running into, Now, his action of monitoring that whole room and all this random motion would be very difficult to process piece by piece, so we just have a single gunshot process that takes care of the whole thing. He, just himself, mocks up this whole room full of tigers and gets them all admiring him. He just goes on having the tigers admire him, that's all. And then he mocks up this whole room full of clowns and admires them. And then he mocks up all of these airplanes.

Now, don't take just one can't and process him and another can't and process him and another can't and process him. No, no, no, no, no. Don't give him any special attention, because you're denying the rest of the groups and so forth.

And that, by the way, is not a bad one, because if he's processing children he'll say, "Now, all right. Now, get a - create an airplane." Down here, this side, he'll get an airplane, "Brrruuhh. Brroomm Brroomm! Brroomm! Brroomm! Bmrroooommmm!" The roof kind of starts bulging.

Make a group out of the "can'ts" or the "maybe can'ts." Just make a group out of them and then process them for short, brief times. And how do you process them? Well, you process them this way: "All right, now get an idea that there's a mock-up out there."

Children are not quiet. And he'll say - he'll get these airplanes and they admire him and, then, he mocks up something else and he admires it. And he just goes on in this fashion.

The guy says, "Just an idea? There - class."

The truth of the matter is that if he wants to brighten himself up or freshen himself up at the end of the day, all he's got to do is read some Self Analysis and get mock-ups and admire the mock-ups and have the mock-ups admire him. That's all. It'll freshen him up. It'll run out what he has been doing during the day and leave him very fresh. Regardless of whether he's been processing anybody during the day or not, that will work.

And you say, "Just an idea. Yeah, just an idea there's a mock-up out there someplace."

What happens during the day is a man has a flow, usually a one-way flow If he's sitting on a clerk's desk or something like that, the flow is in at him. And if he's sitting on a manager's desk, it's going out from him, except for those horrible reports, such as "Number three tank has just blown a sky-piece," and these are jolts that come in. And he gets then - he's just got a one-way flow, one-way flow, one-way flow. It's very amusing what happens to an individual on this - one-way flow will stick.

"All right. Ah, I get that."

He goes home, the wife is all set - wants to go to a movie. He's too tired; he can't go to a movie, he's too tired. Well, let's just reverse the flow. He flowed out, flowed out, flowed out, let's get something flowing in.

"All right. Now get the idea of preventing it from being admired." Wham, they'll go right out of their seats.

Let's have him stand under Niagara Falls looking up at it Just do that for just a few minutes and he'll feel very fresh. Don't do this just before you go to sleep at night while lying in bed, though. You won't get any sleep. You'll simply wake up because that's the only reason you're tired. Tiredness is something - is an incipient boil-off. A boil-off is a fascinating thing. We're going to cover that.

This is horrible. Two or three of them are practically going to blow their heads off before you've run this process very long.

Now, the only difference between a group of children and a group of adults is that the children are very demonstrative, they're noisy, they move more and their mock-ups are better, much better. And the adults are quieter and they're not getting as much done. And otherwise, there's no difference in rules here, no difference in function. And it doesn't matter, then, whether we're processing a group of children or a group of adults.

That applies to little children, too. They're preventing admiration. You'll find out in little kids' cases there is - are members of the family who are preventing them from admiring others. "You mustn't admire your father." "You mustn't admire your mother." "You mustn't admire your great-aunt Bessie Leu." And the child doesn't want his mother to be so admiring of his father because it denies him admiration. He's got a scarcity level of admiration already.

You say, "Well, a person who handles children has to be very understanding," and that sort of thing. No, he's just got to have nerves of solid steel cables. That's all. His nerves got to be better.

So we've got these interpersonal situations preventing admiration, which is going on right in present time, and you just have to pull the cork on them and let those flows flow from terminals to terminals, and the case solves. And by the way, the case solves, which is what's interesting. It isn't just the mock-up. Whatever a mock-up won't do or mock up can't do, that person in his life isn't or can't do. There, that's a parallel. A person acts as good as he can mock up. Horribly true.

He'll have to be a little more agile with his mock-ups, too. If he's just pulling one out of the hat every once in a while, he'll find out the group will get bored on him. And then he'll get one that's too interesting, then they won't come out of it. They'll go flying off to Mars or something of the sort.

Now, the odd part of it is, is the person can have lots of reactive mind and be sitting on top of this with lots of analytical mind. Remind me of a professor one time that was very famous, he - for his temper and so forth. And one of the - he got mad at the class, and one of them came up to him after class and said, "Sir, I wish you'd control your temper a little better."

Now, the inequalities in cases can be categorized or cataloged for your benefit as the slow, the fast and the can't. The person can't get - let's put that in another line here and say it's the can't: he just can't get mock-ups, that's all. And the next one is the slow, and they just take forever to get a mock-up. And the next one is fast - and that varies from optimum, but optimum lies between slow and what we're calling very fast here. This very fast one, your - "All right. Get a mock-up of the barn. Get a mock-up of a church. Get a mock-up of a cow Get a mock-up of a horse. Get a mock-up of a cart." You wouldn't be going fast enough for him.

And he says, "Young man, I will have you know that I control more temper in fifteen minutes than you control in your entire lifetime!"

Is he getting mock-ups? Yep, Are they doing him any good? No. He's got a circuit. He just goes "Brmrrrrrur! Well, come on, you'll have to give them to me faster." He's bored. He's just - blah-deh-blah-wah.

Now, it's sort of that way with the reactive bank and the analytical mind. There's some of these people who just have a horrible reactive bank that they're controlling quite admirably. The only place you really see it reflected in conduct to amount to anything is in their mock-ups. But they're skidding in the direction of that inability.

Silly, but he doesn't happen to have any level of persistence. He can get that mock-up and he (snap) wants the next one right away, (snap) because he knows that last one couldn't persist, see? So he's got to have this next one, bing. (snap) He's got to have the next one, bing. (snap) He's got to have the next one, bing. (snap) That's to keep himself from being informed that they pheww! They just disappear on him, that's all.

Now, a person who is fixed, sort of, he - every mock-up he gets. He'd get a mock-up and then he couldn't move it anywhere. See, he just couldn't move this mock-up.

[The old reel runs out at this point.]

By the way, there is a way of moving mock-ups. You move them a little bit and then you move them more. Gradient scale, you see? Do things a little bit and then do them more. And then do them more and more and more, and you get the whole thing going. Control something a tiny bit and then control it more and more and more. There - you can't get rid of this mockup of this man, well, all right, get rid of one hair on his head. And then get rid of two hairs, six, eight, his hair, his head, the man. That's getting rid of the whole mock-up. All right.

He'll get a brilliant mock-up, and he can hold it for a split instant and it's gone. Well, he gets upset then, and he has to have a new terminal because these terminals keep disappearing.

Producing a mock-up - can't produce a mock-up with somebody or other? Get something they touched once. Get their handkerchief. Now get a stocking. Now get a shoe. Now get a foot, feet, legs, body, head, mock-up, there it is. Gradient scale, you see. You do a little bit, and do it all.

What's wrong with this person? This person is getting mock-ups on The p a circuit. That is to say, he's got some cells or currents over here, and they sort of put mock-ups out there when he calls for them. They put them out there very fast and they don't last very long, and he hasn't any control over them. They're very erratic, they're very random.

Now, you can create things in that fashion. But if you just admire their imperfections, you can achieve the same and even a superior result. So we have this in Mock-up Processing as a big bonus right at the present time, here, you see.

If you stop this person and say, "Put a man out there with a hat on." And he will say, "All right," And you say, "All right. What kind of a hat did he have on?" "Oh well. Let's see, the last one was a fla - ... No, that's a bowler, that's a straw..." You say, "Now, wait a minute. How many hats has he had on?" "Well, while you've been talking here, about thirty." So there's quite some differences in these cases.

Now, your three classifications, then - this kid who was too fast. (snap, snap, snap) Bang, bang! No persistence, you see? He hasn't any persistence at all. There's a nonadmiration of persistence present there, you see? Persistence is what's missing - pardon me, is nonadmiration, nonpersistence. So what you've got, you've got to admire - get him admiring the disappearance of things.

Now, the one who can't get a mock-up, there isn't any reason to have him sitting there unless you can convince him individually, if he complains about this, just - that he just gets a concept that he's got a mock-up. If he can get that, then you're all right, then go on with this. If you can't, you'll have to give him a little bit of individualized work until he becomes convinced of this. He gets the idea he's got a mock-up.

It's very easy for you to figure out. Just get him admiring anything he's doing. That's the rule behind this, just anything he's doing. The mock-up disappears too fast, get him admiring that speed of disappearance. And the next thing you know, you'll find out that he's lost more terminals, more things, more homes and so on. Every terminal he ever had in his whole life has a tendency to go out from under and disappear. Boom, boom, boom! It's gone, gone, gone, gone, gone. Next thing you know, he can't get mock-ups. Reason he can't a mock-up, it's paralleling the reactive mind. Mock-up has a lot to with the reactive mind.

"Can you get the idea you've got a mock-up?"

Now this fellow gets a mock-up and he can't get rid of it - nrrrr, nrrrr, nrrrr. He's had no admiration for holding on. People keep telling him, "Now look, you shouldn't hold on, you should get rid of it, you shouldn't hold on to this, you shouldn't hold on to that." He just holds on. And then they say, "We don't admire you." And he holds on. And they say, "We don't admire you." And he gets - then he gets insisting: "Look, I'm going to get some admiration for holding on if it kills me." Years later when you ask him to get a mock-up and he gets a mock-up - and you say, "All right. Now get another mock-up." "Now get a rabbit." "Now get an infantryman." "Now get an airplane." "Yeah," he says, "what do I do with the rabbit?" And you say, "Well, put it away."

"Yes."

"Yeah, Ha-ha. It doesn't go anyplace. As a matter of fact, the harder I try to put it away the more it stops right there." What do you do?

"Well, have you got one, can you see it?"

You admire - get him to admire its persistence. And if it disappears, you get him to admire the way it disappears. Simple. Whatever he's doing, get him to admire it. or it to admire him.

"No."

Now, the phenomenon of boil-off is one that's quite important to you. And if you are teaching or processing a class like this and you are lecturing to a class like this and you saw two or three of the students asleep, and if you were really on the ball and you weren't making a tape, you would simply make them get up and turn their chair around. That's all. If you were all to turn your chairs around right now, you'd wake up and go home very fresh. Why? You've got sound flowing into the face of them. That's all. Really, I ought to ask you at this moment to turn around and have - and let the sound fly in the other direction. Because it would, it'd wake you up.

"Well, all right. Do you know that there's one there?"

I think we might as well do that. Why don't - why don't you all turn around, face the other direction. (audience laughter; sounds of moving chairs) All right, now that you're all turned around, I'll finish this lecture.

"Yeah, sure, I can get an idea there's one there."

Now, the phenomenon of boil-off is a one-way flow; it's a flow that's been flowing too long in one direction. And you'll find at first a person, when he turns around and flows - gets a flow in the other direction - has a tendency to wake up.

"Well, that's what you do from here on."

Now, this works to a slightly lesser degree than in processing when you go through a program like you've just gone through. You're turned around now. Now you have the sound flowing past you in the opposite direction. It's very possible some of you might feel a little relief on this.

And the case will resolve.

Well now, this manifests itself in terms of boil-off. A person will simply go to sleep on too long a flow. And once in a while if you're processing children or adults, you will find them suddenly falling down across their desk and going out cold.

And the next one is the slow one. He'll just poke around and poke around on this. Too bad, but you can't wait for him because he isn't the average in the class. So what do you do with this one? You could give him some individualized work or you simply tell him, "Get every other one." Get every other one that you call.

Well, don't think something horrible has happened. They've just put the mock-up in front of them and in front of them and in front of them and in front of them and in front of them, and they've flowed toward it and flowed toward it and flowed toward it till all of a sudden they went too far on the one-way flow and it knocked them out.

That might disturb him, but it will be better for him than to be shocked in the middle of every one of them and just have to ditch them and get another one and ditch another one before he got there and ditch another one. And he finally gets the idea he hasn't got any terminals at all and he'll go way down Tone Scale.

Now what you do is simply turn the mock-up around and put the mock-up behind them. And you put the mock-up behind them and let them put it behind them. This first one they put behind them will brighten them up and give them a tendency to awaken and be brighter and fresher.

Now, the very active, dramatizing child or adult, oh dear! They're all over the place, And the child, when you tell him to be an airplane, will fly down the aisle. He'll just come right out of the seat and fly down the aisle sometime.

So when you see a person getting groggy, you should, as Group Auditor, indicate that person and tell him to put the mock-ups behind him, or just as general practice, you ought to shift the position of mock-up on the whole group,

Well, actually, that is what you call dramatizing psychosis when it's that bad. The child gets himself completely identified with an object and when anything and anybody completely identifies himself with an object and is that object 100 percent of the time and couldn't be otherwise or shift himself or have any criterion on it - has got to make his body into that object, he's in a bad way.

Now that has two parts to it there. If you notice somebody getting groggy suddenly and inexplicably when the others aren't, you know he's got a mock-up where he shouldn't have one. So you just ask him, "Where did you put that last mock-up?" He'll say, "I put it behind me."

Knew a psychiatrist one time, poor fellow. He used to tell me all about his patients - all over his office! Had the patient lay down on the couch; (snap) he's lying down on the couch, see? And the patient came over to the desk; (snap) he's over to the desk. And he made a face like this, and he made a face like this. That's the way. And the fellow just throwing himself all over the room in order to describe patients! It was worse than any child you ever saw. Because the thought would go into action without his judgment intervening. And you will find that is characteristic in the common behavior of this child that dramatizes madly on these mock-ups. Their thought goes into action without the judgment - without judgment. That's the difference there.

You say, "Put the next one in front of you and go on with the rest of the mock-ups." And you should shift for the whole group the mock-ups and the position of the mock-ups where - at regular intervals, let's say, at the ratio of about six mock-ups.

Doesn't matter how many kids throw their arms around, particularly, if you find one that when he thinks of a bear, he is a bear. Well, you'll find out this is a tendency with children, tendency. But if it always happens, and it happens noisily, it'll start happening compulsively, you've got a case on your hands. So don't recognize this as just an amusing case. This is a case which has very little judgment.

Don't ever go on about - more than about six mock-ups without saying, "All right, now put them behind you," and six more mock-ups without saying, "Put them on the right of you," and six more, "to the left of you." And six more, "above you." And six more, "below you." And then "in front of you" again.

The nervous child or adult is disturbed by the noise or activities or the shifts around of the others. And they just sit there in apathy. They just, bang - somebody says something, something drops, something of the sort. This child will just sink into apathy. Ah, that's nothing very horrible. So what. Patch him up, put him in a special group. Now, the nervous one of course has to be put in a class, a group by themselves if you want to really deal with this, and be given a little bit of this. And their nervousness goes away fairly rapidly so they can be put back with the others.

You'll have to remind people of this once in a while. And you should change them around because they will very often have the idea of putting a mock-up out there in front of them. And they shift it behind them for one mock-up and then they put the next one out in front of them again because they got too strong a flow running and the flow is mastering them, and they're no longer mastering the flow You see how that would be? All right.

Now, future averaging, by which we mean running them into the same group, takes care of this. They average out - have a tendency to do so.

So, we shift the mock-up around. And when anybody starts boiling off, if they just boiled off and you didn't catch them in time, it's nothing very dangerous. They'll just simply sort of snore it off. And if you want to wake them up, you don't have to take them out someplace or do something special or get smelling salts or something. Just kind of shake them awake a little bit, easily and gently because they can be startled with this, and you just say, "Where was the last place you put a mock-up?" And they say, "I put one - I don't know."

Now, the - you have three groups, then, and only three groups that you're interested in: one, really, are the can'ts; the slows and nervous, you put them together; and the fasts. And these groups will operate as units. And after you've worked with them for a relatively short time, you could put them all back together again and you're all right.

And you say, "Well, put a mock-up, now, in back of you. Now get a current of water flowing at that mock-up," or some such thing or "Get something flowing from the mock-up to you." And all of a sudden they'll brighten. That's all. And you just got the way they'll run. Well, they'll brighten right up and they'll wake up on something like this. Now, therefore your mock-ups should be placed, and if placed too long in one position, will cause boil-off; and boil-off is just too long a flow in one direction. That's all that happens.

Now, there's one thing you mustn't do with children or adults on a low IQ level. You mustn't give them individualized attention to too much of a degree. And the reason you shouldn't is because then the rest of them can't, until they've got individual attention, too.

There is nothing else you need to know about boil-off. It just happens that that's it. It means that the particles are changing in location to each other so as to produce and restimulate an old period of unconsciousness. That's what's happened,

One little boy, "Can you get a mock-up?"

It doesn't matter, by the way, about boiling off. If you had a person boiling off for hours and hours and hours and hours and hours - we've boiled them off for as long as three hundred hours with no slightest benefit to the case. So don't get the idea it'll do the case any good, because it won't.

"No, I can't get a mock-up."

Now, these mock-ups will do all sorts of things. They'll fly around like mad, They will go into various erratic levels of action. You can't be too sure of what the mock-up is doing for your group. Well, at a Group Auditor level you don't care what this mock-up is doing because you can be sure it's going to get better. But at first, you will have various erratic things happening about a mock-up. You will have a mock-up occurring there that, well, every time he gets a person, this person is jumping a hoop over - through a hoop. And just keep jumping through the hoop. He didn't tell this person to jump through the hoop, it's just what happens to this person. He will eventually get to a point where he's no longer doing this. I mean, it'll wear out.

"All right. Come up here and I'll give you a mock-up,"

Erratic things not called for. Now, they'll complain to you that their mock-ups are doing these things or they will think it's very funny to have a mock-up amuse them this way. You needn't pay any attention to it at all. You can just know that mock-ups are going to do strange and peculiar things. And if you must do something about it, just get them to admire that peculiarity and it'll disappear. The theory behind mock-ups is that the MEST universe is an illusion, and that one must increase one's ability to create illusions in order to exist better and perceive better the MEST universe. And to think better, one certainly must be able to handle illusion. If he can handle illusion, he can handle imagination, which means he can handle the future. And the future is computational. Actually, what it is, is putting electric terminals into the future when you put mock-ups for the future: things to be admired, things for which I'm going to be admired.

All right. He's up here. We give him a mock-up; the rest of the children can't get mock-ups. Why? They've got to have an individual one, too.

Now, you do mock-ups in order to rehabilitate the individual's control of objects, persons, things, and these things all occur rather regularly. The processing of an individual of the group, away from the group, should be done just with that. You should take this individual all the way out of the group if you're going to process him. Now, I've mentioned to you this: you shouldn't process an individual all by himself up there in front of the group, because you've given him a special mock-up, and now the rest of the group will want special mock-ups. And you've cut down their ability to get mock-ups. So you just mark this trouble down as trouble and decide that you're now going to give him special mock-ups only in the absence of the group, And preferably so that the group doesn't know about it.

Individualized attention then will hold up the whole class. So minimize it. Split the children up into groups or the adults up into these three groups and thereafter process them again in chunks, and try to keep this individualized attention to an absolute minimum.

In other words, just - the class or the group's filing out or something of this sort. And you don't keep the person in the room and say, "And now we're going to process you some more," something like that. You say, "Well now, come in a little bit early tomorrow," or get them away from the rest of the group if you're going to do this at all. Or have an entire group that you're going to process individually. You get that?

Don't try to patch up a case in front of the rest of the class or in front of the rest of the group. Because if you do, the rest of them are going to slow down to want that attention. So you just mark the fact and split the groups up accordingly.

You spot all of the people you've got to process individually and you move them into an awkward squad. And make sure that you call it an awkward squad or something of the sort and don't make it desirable at all. And so the rest of the group - the rest of the group don't get upset and so forth by this.

(Recording ends abruptly)

Children particularly are very touchy on this subject. You can take out a certain strata of the group that you're processing and then handle them individually and put them back into the group again. You will find yourself doing this quite often.

[End of lecture]

It is not terribly necessary that you do this. You save two-thirds of this group, you've done better than would have happened with these individuals otherwise. It's rather obvious.

If you want to take that other third and do something very special for them, you'll find out that it'll pay dividends. You just bring them up to a level where they can hold their own with the rest of the group, though.

Now, the use of mock-ups by a professional is very wide and very varied, and a great many things can be done with this, but I would advise you in handling mock-ups in general and so on to leave that on a professional level. Handle them on these lists and handle them in Self Analysis, you're on good, sound, safe ground. And use admiration of their imperfections, you're still on safe ground.

You start going into specific mock-ups or specific illnesses and specific things and so on, it requires a considerable command of the subject in theory and of flows and other things in order to get away with it. There's no need for you to do that. You give individual processing in terms, then, of Self Analysis, and you don't worry too much about a professional level action.

If you have a case that is very bad off, a case that's very, very bad off, get that case - if it has to have very special individual address get that case some professional auditing. Don't try to go too deeply into individual cases yourself. It's very true that you can handle psychosomatic illnesses in children and adults, but I would advise you to handle them with Self Analysis.

And a psychosomatic illness is easily remedied, by the way, with list processing - processing by a list. Very easily remedied. Just have them put mock-ups in the area where the psychosomatic exists. Just have them keep putting up mock-ups in there. And then shift the mock-ups around here and there and put the mock-ups back in that area again.

Let's say they got a headache. And well, have them put mock-ups in their head for a while. But if the child has some permanent "permanent" - disability, it's - you'll find out that this won't be hindered. I mean, you won't - this child won't be hindered in any way by giving him processing as a member of a group or by giving him list processing. The child won't be hurt by it and might even recover from it. But I wouldn't expect it as a matter of course or demand that it happen. Do not treat this with the level of seriousness, in other words.

If it's handled by Group Processing, all right. And if it's not, your individual processing should be limited to putting people in shape so that they can keep pace with the group. And I've given you how to do that. Now, it'll happen quite incidentally that a lot of psychosomatic illnesses will turn off in your group. Just consider it a bonus. You're trying to make people better able to live; you're not trying to make them well.

People come around and say, "Isn't that remarkable. Our little Bertram always had sinusitis." Or this group of war veterans you may be processing may have had all manner of shot and shell go through it, and you might have them, while doing your session, have them flopping around like fish out of water with somatics. Don't pay any attention to it. So they hurt. Good. The somatic will run out. That's all. You just keep on with this.

Now, the handling of a psychosomatic illness is very simple, but you must have this piece of information: You must be consistent and persistent in mock-ups to run a somatic all the way out. A somatic is liable to turn on during the processing session where you're handling the whole group, and then the somatic is liable to come on stronger and stronger and stronger. And you as a Group Auditor could very easily lose your head and say, "My goodness, oh, dear! What am I doing to this poor man? He says if we give him just one more mock-up, it'll bash his brains in."

Well, I'II tell you what you do in that case: You give him just one more mock-up. And then you give him another dozen, because his brains in his head is not going to split him.

Whatever is turned on by Creative Processing will turn off by the same process. Now, don't mix processes, If you start in with a list, finish with a list. If something turned a man's headache on, for heaven's sakes, keep on with the same list. Don't suddenly switch off and start running flows on him. You could put the mock-ups in new places and that sort of thing, but don't suddenly turn around and say, "Well, we better run out an engram." No, no. No. The best process for it is Self Analysis type lists. And you run it until it runs out.

Now, the easiest way to do something like that is, if your - if you have an older group, is to give a book to somebody or other, if somebody gets into trouble, and just tell them to go out in the other room and finish it off. Make somebody else read the list to them rather than give that person special attention yourself, because you'll have everybody with somatics on. All right.

Another thing here is mock-ups must not be a consecutive story. You'll find it a very inviting idea to tell a story of Br'er Rabbit to a group of children with a series of mock-ups. Don't do it. No dice. You know why?

There's differentiation, association, identification. And identification is at 0.0 and association is at 20.0, and differentiation, which is the essence of sanity itself, is at 40.0. And we want mock-ups which change the subject radically. And as long as we change the subject radically, the child doesn't suddenly get a story of his own turning on, or the adult doesn't get a story of his own turning on and start paralleling it.

In other words, you give him Br'er Rabbit and you say, "All right, now mock up a carrot." "Now he's lippity-lopping to the store." "Now get him there with the storekeeper." "Now get the Big, Bad Wolf coming in the door." And this child, you would think, would be terribly absorbed with this story. No, no, He's now got - he's now got Grandma. And the more you give him Br'er Rabbit, the more Br'er Rabbit looks like Grandma. And you're just digging his grave, that's all. You're just plowing this kid right on in. Why? The MEST universe is logical. Stories are logical. If you really want something that works well, get it as widely apart as possible from mock-up to mock-up.

"Now mock up a fire engine." "Now mock up a beauty shop." "Now mock up the vinegar works." "Now mock up a bottle of ginger ale." "Now mock up a movie actor." "Now mock up a cow." We just get this jump, jump, jump, jump. And that's what a list, in essence, must do. Then we get the "associative level" of logic chopped into and broken up. It is that level of associative thinking which has led this person along this line, The reactive mind is not capable of differentiation; it's only capable of identification. And as long as we ask it to associate, we're bordering on identification. It'll very shortly start to identify.

So let's go up the level where we're perfectly safe, which is differentiation, and give different mock-ups one right after the other, And that's why these lists are important. And that's why you should process from a list even if you're doing your own hand-out processing, because you have a tendency, when standing in front of people and giving them things, to connect them and associate them.

You know, you sort of feel the pressure and you give a - "All right, let's give a fire engine," "All right, now let's have a ladder." "Now let's have a fireman," "Now Let's have a wheel," "Now let's have a fire." "Now let's ..." See, you're all on the same subject. That's identification. And that's not a good list. So, if you want a list for a special group, you should sit down and then just figure out a lot of things, no matter how well associated they are, and then just rewrite them so they're all cluttered up and not in association anymore. See how that would be? Then, that's what's done.

Now, the theory of Self Analysis and similar lists is the theory of terminals. And the theory is that you're putting up, by creative levels, new terminals, and you're keeping them divorced from the real universe. You're keeping them as unlike the real universe as you can. And you do this for several reasons. But one of the chief ones is it is one way of meeting a level of knowingness which is very high.

A Level of knowingness is very important. How much does your preclear know he knows? You can pick up the rest of this information from books, you can pick up this material here and there, hearsay - figure it out.

But get this one. Burn this in. Sort of so it'll scorch a little bit. You want to establish a level of certainty: certainty of location, certainty of knowledge, certainty of beingness. The child who is uncertain, the adult who is uncertain is a child or an adult that isn't well. You want a level of certainty.

How can you quickly reach a level of certainty. Have him mock up a scene; have him make it his scene, and he knows where it is. He's got a certainty! And that is a fast way of reaching a certainty. So when somebody is getting very little benefit from mock-ups, ask him these questions: "You know where it is? You know where this mock-up is?" The fellow will all of a sudden tell you "No!" You say, "Well, put it there on the windowsill," "Yeah, I can do that."

It never occurred to him before. He's had these mock-ups all over the universe but he's never known where they are. Maybe they were in his space, maybe they weren't in his space. So he had no certainty of location. And the other one is "Is it yours?" Fellow says, "No." "Well, make it yours." "Well, uh ... Yeah, I can change it a little bit."

"Well, change it. Now change it some more. Now do you know whose it is?"

"Yeah. Yeah, it's mine." He'll brighten right up. Level of certainty. And that's what you're trying to achieve. You're getting a certainty of a terminal.

And he's - can get inner flows from these terminals. Now, you can do two mock-ups for each one if you want to, and you'll get some interesting results. You can have him make his last mock-up last on the right, and put his new mock-up on the left, just for variation.

Make him do two mock-ups out there at the same time. Let his old mock-up persist and then put a new mock-up alongside of it. But that's not important, not near as important as establishing a level of certainty. Does he know it's his?

If anybody is having real trouble with mock-ups, it's because he doesn't know they're his and he doesn't know where they are. Of course, "doesn't know where they are" also means he doesn't know when they are. When is that mock-up? And that becomes very important to him.

Now, in conclusion, the function of the Group Auditor is seen to be a very important one from the level of Dianetics and Scientology. And it's important from the level of groups. I'll give you a little bit of an idea of a preliminary test on this, and this is from an actual record of a test which is going on at the present moment.

Self Analysis was given for a relatively short space of time to a group of children that varied in number - same children, but the influenza epidemic, you know, was going on, so the group was varying between twenty and thirty. And the previous gain of this same group in reading age before Self Analysis was between .9 and .5 months per month, according to the ability of the teacher. That's the previous gain - .9 to .5 months per month.

Now, the gain in reading age after three-and-a-half weeks of Self Analysis on the average for those students was 4.0 months! By actual tests, just by standard school tests, LCP tests.

The average gain was from .9 to .5, and the gain after three-and-a-half weeks of Self Analysis was 4.0 months. That happens to be a gain somewhat in the neighborhood there, oh, somewhere between 5 and - 5 and 8 per - 800 percent.

Now, some of these made no gain because they were absent during the influenza epidemic. And that's included in that average of 4.0. They're included there. And there were many gains of 6, 7 and 8 months of reading age.

And there was one of 11 months and one of 13 months with three-and-a-half weeks of Self Analysis given for about twenty minutes per day to this group. So you're not dealing with anything light. And because you don't see something terrifically dramatic happening right off the bat, don't worry about that.

This is a group of very backward children who should be in an institution, but are in class and in school because there aren't enough institutions.

It was the more intelligent ones of the class who made this terrific gain of 9, 11 and 13 months. They made this terrific gain. They were the more intelligent ones. What this does in a higher level class is subject to further testing, but this is a low-level class. So that your benefits and gains are the benefits, by test, of putting the child in a frame of mind where he can be instructed. And that's what you're trying to do.

And in terms of an adult, you're trying to put him in the frame of mind where he can be interested in life. And after that, you can instruct them and interest them. But unless you have done that first step there you have a missing bridge, which is going to hold down the third dynamic wherever it is missing.

(Recording ends abruptly)
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