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ENGLISH DOCS FOR THIS DATE- Process to Resolve Randomity and Automaticity (1ACC-55) - L531104c | Сравнить
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CONTENTS RANDOMITY AND AUTOMATICITY Cохранить документ себе Скачать
1ACC-531ACC-54
13 53 27A 53 4 Nov 53 Randomity and Automaticity, Process to Resolve14 53 Cont 54 4 Nov 53 Randomity and Automaticity, Proc to Resolve, cont.
Transcript of lecture by L. Ron Hubbard AICL-53 renumbered 27A and again renumbered 53 for the "Exteriorization and the Phenomena of Space" cassette series.Transcript of lecture by L. Ron Hubbard AICL-53 continued - renumbered 54 for the "Exteriorization and the Phenomenon of Space" cassette series.
[This and the following tape appear as a single lecture in the master list.][This and the previous tape appear as a single lecture in the master list.]

RANDOMITY AND AUTOMATICITY

RANDOMITY AND AUTOMATICITY (CONTINUED)

A lecture given on 4 November 1953A lecture given on 4 November 1953
[Based on the clearsound version only.][Based on the clearsound version only.]


This morning it is noviembre the 4th - cuatro.

Continuing this morning lecture, I want to give you the balance of this randomity processing.

Female voice: Half past eight.

It must be obvious to you that that which has been chosen out as an opponent will then attack the individual. Let's get the concept of resistance to evil as the great contribution of an organization of which you've not heard at all, called the Christian church. There's nothing between me and the Christian church because I don't resist them. But they teach resistance to evil.

?Que' dice?

There's a fellow by the name of - I don't know, I think his name is Sheen, or something. (There's no sheen to him though!) This guy last night was - had a - had a gorgeous lecture on. (Somebody turned it on by accident.) And this is a real character. The first - the first thing he does - he walked up to a blackboard and he wrote down what a nurse should have. And the first thing was a nurse should have an incision. And... You think I'm joking, but you could actually go get this tape. And the second thing a nurse should have was cheerfulness. And the third thing she'd have is a sense of the invisible. In other words, "Let's you and me play hidden influences, huh?"

Female voice: I said, "Half past eight."

Well, he gave a long lecture on this. And the reason she should have an incision is - he couldn't quite put this in but somehow or other... It doesn't have to be a physical incision you understand... And I'm surprised at this old boy, frankly, I'm surprised at him - at his age! I never ran into any nurses that didn't have. But anyway, not to make his spiritual guidance tawdry or more bawdy than it is... He goes on for some time with this.

It's not "half past eight"; "Ocho y media" - something like that.

It's remarkable that the fellow is applause happy. He is uncertain... Remember the applause scale in the recent charts, and so forth? The applause scale? Hungry for applause and - oh, no, he - he'll just get applause; it doesn't occur to him one way or the other that he won't - that's the top of the scale, toward the top of the scale. And then you run on down to: Certain he won't get applause. Well, somewhere along the line he gets uncertain about applause. Well, Sheen is dramatizing it, but madly. And it's very curious to sit there and watch the Tone Scale operating.

This morning, in spite of being in a good mood, we're going to take up some more about "Rondomity."

[Editor's Note: The charts referred to in this lecture have not been found.]

Male voice: Rondomity.

But it's no wonder that this boy has got a very good command of audience right now because, brother, he sure backs up the hearse-operations, blood, and so on, all in a pleasant tone of voice, just as though he was talking about flowers, and so forth. And he's hit the Christian acceptance level right on the nose: death, blood, suffering, suffering, blood, bandages with pus on them, so on. He - he's just - just cracking it right there beautifully. Just gorgeous to watch the Christian church in operation - just gorgeous to watch it in operation.

And automaticity.

Resistance to evil. How the devil would you make the most evil culture you possibly could make? Point out that something is evil and make them resist it. That's the whole trick of the universe: resistance. Because that means matching wavelengths, which means entanglement. That is evaluation on what you should choose out for randomity. And, brother, anytime you choose some randomity, please choose something that is bright and fast. Don't consider any other kind of randomity is worthwhile at all.

Automaticity and randomity are actually... What's the matter?

A gentleman a couple of hundred years ago, five hundred years ago, a thousand years ago was entirely aware of this - "What, you cad! You dare cross swords with a gentleman! Flog him!" You know? "He wasn't well born. I don't dare stab him."

Male voice: She's driving her auto to the automatic.

Well, that sounds silly. But the fastest way in the world they could have caused the deterioration of the state of being a gentleman was to have dueled indiscriminately. See? Choosing out for randomity people who weren't gentlemen. And as long as they were gentlemen and dueled only with gentlemen and killed only gentlemen, and would only deign on the field of battle to slaughter other gentlemen, and as long as this code continued and until Christianity got to it, the world was in a rather firm grasp, believe me. These fellows, actually, really didn't know that the peasantry existed. They knew it in a sort of a side way that there was another being around, sort of like you know there are mice in the world.

Oh, automaticity. That's where you eat - an automaticity.

But to get the state of mind of such people would be rather difficult today because everybody is equal today. Oh boy! That - that's a real operation: resist everything. You finally wind up with everybody playing "the only one" and everybody's lonesome and nobody's got any friends. You see how that would work? Resistance to evil.

Female voice: Yes.

"Now, I'll tell you what's evil," the Christian church says. "The devil is evil!" He doesn't exist, you see. I mean, there is no being, an evil being, known as the devil, who has this and that. Well, that's what you resist; so that gets them to fighting nothing. Well that confuses the dickens out of them, and they said fight this and fight that and fight something else and then they finally said, "Fight your own original sin." Oh! Go back on the time track, in other words, and fight yourself.

..Because it is a very, very good thing for an auditor to know something about the subject. Period. That's why I'm taking that up this morning. Usually I give a good alibi, but that's the only alibi I can think of this morning for loading you down with these two horrible, incomprehensible subjects once more.

Resistance to evil. And out of resistance to evil you get, actually, the entire pattern of modern aberration. You want to know - you want to know what modern aberration is all about: You get some preclear and they can't stand dirt. The idea "Oooh dirt! Nnh!" Yeah, you'll see them - every once in a while they get so bad off that they carry pieces of toilet tissue in their hands and touch doorknobs only with the tissue in their hand. You go around New York City where the space is scarce and you see this quite often: somebody opening doors with a piece of toilet tissue and then wadding the tissue up very daintily and throwing it away. That's resistance to germs, resistance to dirt - contamination. But notice how hidden it is.

This morning I want to give you processes which resolve these two things. Let's take automaticity. What is automaticity?

Do you know, frankly I don't know whether a germ exists or not? I happen, unlike medical doctors, to have studied pathology. You go in on most medical doctors and talk about bacteriology and pathology and biochemistry and they say, very intelligently, they say "Huh?" That's the truth.

Automaticity is setting something up to run automatically so that you don't have to pay any attention to it anymore. So you have something which has been hidden from your attention but which is yet activated by your attention. That's very cute. Everybody likes to set up these machines for you; they make a gentleman or a lady out of you; they make you polite at the table; and my God, what do you know, they make you talk English. Nearly anybody who engages in the business of using language for communication has abandoned the use of - nearly everybody - has abandoned the use of direct facsimile manufacture and has certainly abandoned the use of simply direct communication. You know, you think it and that's it.

I almost fell flat one day. I walked in a place - I'd sent a couple of... I was in a port that didn't have any naval hospital and I had a couple of boys who were bad off bacteriologically and so I went over to see if there was a town doctor to take care of them. I went into this place and here was an old guy and he had a back room full of slides and microscope and stains and doves and all kinds of things. He was a bacteriologist as well as being an M.D. He was quite interested - quite interested in the problems involved. He immediately took slides and he took specimens and slides and he went back and examined them very thoroughly and pronounced his adjudication on the subject of bacteria by having looked at the bacteria. See how peculiar this was?

But people who have abandoned the use of mock-ups for communication are in a rather bad way because they are unable to mock up a mock-up which then will demonstrate, pictorially - Confucius say, "One picture worth ten thousand words," which will convey pictorially the entire subject of a conversation. And when somebody can't do that - I know there is nobody present who is in this sad and lamentable problem, not confronted by this problem - they have to use language. And language, by demand, is an automaticity.

Do you know that you walk into any medical office anywhere in this town and you simply tell them, "I think I have whumpbitis," and the fellow will look at you and wonder whether or not the whump gland is swollen or something and then promptly shoot you with Formula 627 that just came in in the morning mail from Abbott & Company. They said it was good for this; he doesn't know whether it is or not. He'll keep on shooting people with this for the next two years until all of a sudden Abbott & Company says, "We've just found out it isn't any good for that." If he is sold on the idea of disease and if disease is caused by bacteria and if the bacteria is visible in a microscope, it would seem that the happiest and quickest way to find out if somebody had a certain disease would be to simply take a specimen of the blood or something of the sort and take a look at it. That's Pasteur in operation. Well, they don't do that. This old boy is a freak. He's sitting out in one corner of the world... He actually looks for bugs. I don't know whether bugs exist or not, but I know that if you - if a guy has an agreement that certain biochemical compounds will give him assistance, why, he evidently gets well from it. But I know if he's really convinced there's disease, he's a sick man. He's real sick.

They start in constructing a machine called language - the language machine at the first moment that they happen to notice that the baby says "gub." Everybody is standing around then, trying to make the baby says "gub-gub," and here we go. Because it's an automatic machine. Some people can handle it ably; some people are incapable of handling it.

A young girl ... It'll break your heart sometime, you see this pretty little girl and she comes in and she - she's real sick. And you noticed as she opened the door to your office that she used a piece of paper or she merely diffidently touched the knob. Look; notice things like that. She's just scared of dirt. She's scared of bacteria. She isn't going to touch; in other words, she doesn't dare reach - what? Something which she has been caused to resist and they've taught her to resist it.

Their capability of handling the machine determines whether or not they are capable in handling the language. Well, when you can handle the language, remember that ninety-nine and ninety-nine one-hundredths of the people you are talking to are being handled by the language. They're being handled by communications and they're being handled by a machine.

So the next on resistance is, of course, an inhibition. And just below that, desire. In the next life you'd see this character gloriously wallowing in all the dirt they can find, wearing old and ragged clothes. See? See how the cycle works? So you teach people mental hygiene and safety. These - this particular bunch of kids that they're training today in schools are going to be worse off in terms of accidents. The number of accidents in America twenty years from now is going to be staggering because everybody has been taught to resist accidents. So you resist accidents, inhibit accidents and then you turn up wanting accidents.

I dare say there are not five hundred writers in the United States today who ably and consistently turn out material for public consumption. There are certainly very, very few people in the United States who talk consistently and continually without recourse to some sort of machinery - very few.

How do you manufacture fifty million accident - prones? By arduously training all the schoolchildren in safety. You make accidents real scarce in their minds. There's plenty of accidents out there - anybody can have an accident. And you show them that the whole world is running on a sort of an automaticity and they can't do anything about it so they have to be careful.

You take Truman; when he came up Tone Scale after he'd been processed enough he got to a point where he could make speeches. But when he first was president he stood up kind of apologetically and he had big sheets of paper in front of him and he read them off. "Today, as I stand in front of the Congress, I wish to convey this message and all those present..." Here he went.

How do you disenfranchise a thetan? You show him that he has to resist something because it's bad for him. This means he's not that powerful. How do we solve it? You have the kid be the accident and then have the kid be himself and be the accident and be himself; and so forth, till he gets all over the idea of fighting accidents. That's what you're trying to get him over. You're trying to get him over the idea of fighting and resisting as something bad because he thinks these are bad, you see. They're also taught that fighting is bad, you see. I mean, it's a real squirrel cage. They're taught an accident is bad and then fighting is bad; and so if an accident is bad then you've got to fight accidents, but you mustn't fight. And they're all caught in that - in that squirrel cage. And it results in automaticity so that you get people who can't think and who are excellent slaves.

What's that? Any time you see somebody reading a speech, hah! he's run by a machine - not a political machine; a machine which feeds him what to say. Now, he's not handling the machine. Actually, he has absolutely no need of such a machine. It is not just a luxury, it's a damn foolishness.

How do you make slaves? It's not allowed today to use an electric shock machine on people who are normal in order to involve and engage them in slavery. That's not allowed today. It's only allowed to educate them into slavery. That's allowed. All right. That's not even bad, by the way. Whoever wants to make a whole bunch of slaves, that's perfectly all right, as long as they don't get me too involved in it.

And yet in school, children are denied space and denied space and denied space until they, at length, have a machine which handles them utterly. Now, because this machine is composed of maybes, their language comes out in the same way. And they start in to talk on some subject and they say, "Well, I don't know, but my scientific opinion of the matter - if, of course, I am allowed to state a scientific opinion on the matter, if there is a science involved in the matter, which of course is questionable - that the opinion of Professor Bunk rests on a great many factors which I have not had the opportunity to completely study." And they let this clown be an authority. What's he - what is he good for? Well, if you could just put hardcover bindings on him and put him on a shelf, he'd serve the same purpose. Because all he is, is a machine. He is not worth paying two cents' worth of attention to.

And that's really all I've objected to for a number of years. And I think the only reason I came out in the open and started on the subject of Dianetics and Scientology was I told them there was going to be a war with Japan - I happen to like the Japanese people; I've never chosen them out for randomity; I spoke Japanese when I was a kid - and said the Japanese national character is such that if you push them so far and do so many things that cost them just so much face in the Orient, they will then have no other choice than to commit suicide by declaring war against the United States. They'll have no intentions of trying to win the war; they'll just commit suicide. And the wild abandon of a Japanese committing suicide is comparable only to a Malay running amok.

Now, when the public confronts something that is not running on a machine, they become alarmed, because it's not disciplined. Therefore, extemporaneous speaking, fast writing, and that sort of thing, are very badly in question. You'll find people standing around tearing somebody's work to pieces because it was all written in two days or something. "That story couldn't be any good because it was written in two days." That tells you immediately, "What, it wasn't written by a machine?" The only stories in the English language that have endured were written, believe me, in that same ratio of two days - the only ones. They have been torn off at such a mad communication rate that automaticity had very little chance to get in.

I had several articles in 1936, 1937, 1938 on this subject of: Japan means to conquer the Orient and if she can't do it she'll have to commit suicide. So the United States has to decide whether or not it is part of the Japanese empire, which is to the effect, does it approve of the Japanese empire and is it patting it on the back and working hand in glove with it? (This was perfectly easy, by the way, because the Japanese were practically enslaved by American ideas.) Or they have to turn around and say right now, before Japan gets it all built up into forty-five-thousand-ton battleships, "Naughty, naughty," and slap their wrists. So if they commit suicide now, all right.

But a fellow has to be pretty able to make mock-ups to really handle language. If he's able to handle mock-ups, he can handle language. When he's not able to handle mock-ups, the language has a tendency to handle him.

But the years drifted on and Sumner Welles' company, Tidewater, kept selling oil and scrap iron to Japan to build more battleships; and when they got it all fixed up, why, they had a big war and that was all right too, but damn them, they got me in it. And I couldn't - this was too much insult. And I think, actually, that's the only thing I've got against war. They involved me in it, they involved my family in it, and so on. It's taken me years to try to patch up havingness, and so forth, as immediate result of this confounded, stupid war. I liked the Japanese in the first place and the next thing I knew I was standing on a bridge firing away with mad abandon at Japs. Silly! Whole thing was silly.

So we have a machine. And let's take a look at a book called Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health, written by some obscure fellow back in May the - in the early part of 1950, published on May 9th, in New York City by an outfit which is trying to live up to its name, called "Hermitage House." They have now achieved their goal of becoming hermits in the book world.

See, it was all right if somebody wanted the war and somebody could have a good time fighting it. I wouldn't have minded going out and shooting at a bunch of Japanese while a batch of Japanese were shooting at me just for the hell of it. But to give it all this significance and to mess up things and to make a bunch of slaves out of men by dragging them into the armed forces, so forth, this was real bad.

But this organization on any other thing and things that have gone on, and some things said about the author or things remarked about auditors or things which preclears think they have found, and so on, nothing - nothing that's happened in other words, no opinion of a fellow by the name of Fishcake, Morris Fishcake, writing in such magazines as Newsweek - none of these opinions have been able to invalidate one fact: Language is damned aberrative.

I was in the armed forces, by the way. I didn't have to go to that war. So again, that must be specious one way or the other because I was in the armed forces way, way, way before Pearl Harbor. But I knew it was on the time track so I thought I might as well be in - in a position where I at least said where I was going to be standing when I got shot. And I was! So you see what randomity is.

Let's not overlook that, Because when we look into our low-toned, very low-toned case that is being handled by a language machine, we are looking at somebody whose mock-ups are also being handled by a language machine, and which mock-ups are tremendously crammed with good old automaticity.

Now, there is resistance only because one has become an integral part of a culture. See? Being in a - an integral part of a culture - being a part of a culture, you see, and being dependent and interdependent upon this culture for one's general randomity in existence, one then finds oneself inheriting the enemies of the culture. The difference between this, as it goes on every day of the week, is occasionally somebody comes up and decides he's tired of inheriting all these enemies; he might as well - he might as well do something about it and - do something active about it - and then not get swamped just because he's doing something active about it. That would be the other thing.

We are looking, when we look at language, at the greatest liability a person can have which is an automaticity of language. This finally winds itself down to voices. Now, undoubtedly you've heard of voices; people have voices. And this goes into - when it gets so bad that the person doesn't even have voices anymore, you have circuits. And then the person has opinions which suddenly dart in upon him from nowhere and give him strange impulses, usually not to do something. And this is language at work in the line of automaticity.

The noble thing to do is to sacrifice and go down into the noble glory of having - having served all. You'll find many people run this, by the way. They - you get some preclear, so on, you're not going to get him two inches up the track until you get him the - over the idea of sacrificing himself for mankind. This is another piece of randomity; that's the play he's playing. It's an interesting play for him. But it - he gets playing down so far and then he finds out he's too close to the footlights and his pants are on fire.

You're not processing anything different today than you were processing three years ago. All the phenomena are still there and every once in a while you're going to have occasion to use it.

Well, the solution of randomity is the solution of automaticity and one does this by beingness. That clear?

Now, mark this. Mark this carefully: A preclear is asked to get a mockup; he gets the mock-up asked for and does with it what he is told to do. Get that as one setup.

As you process this - I'm not going to give you right this minute the endless processes by which this can be done - but, actually, you should be able to figure them out from exactly what you've been taught here in the last - first few weeks. They're just endless. When you get that as the goal of processing, you've really got yourself a goal.

This other one is: The preclear conceives a mock-up, handles a mockup-two different things.

Now, one of the randomities you have to solve is the randomity between the thetan and the body. And what do you know, there is one - big one. The thetan has chosen, early on the track, bodies for his randomity. Now he wants them. What's the difference? Now he wants them and can't have them; now he isn't... Just that, now he isn't.

And get this one: An hypnotic subject is seated in an hypnotist's chair. He is put into a trance and is then fed language which places him in various situations which he believes utterly to be taking place.

All right. And let's take up immediately, to wind this up, another technique which I spoke to you about yesterday and which I don't think you're doing to its fullest extent: Where the preclear isn't. Now, the reason I'm taking this up is I wish to impress upon you, if I possibly can, the fact that you, in pretty good shape, will have no idea whatsoever what some - what shape some preclears are in. It takes a lot of imagination sometimes.

And get this one. Let's just tear this problem to pieces and drop the veil on all this stuff. Get this one: A preclear under processing who is having trouble with language will get substitute pictures instead of words; he has circuits that push pictures at him. The most notable of these cases used to get a picture before he'd get the phrase. Uniformly, he'd get the picture then get the phrase, get the picture then get the phrase, get the picture and then get the phrase. To give you some kind of an idea of what kind of pictures he got - I'm sorry to be ribald because it's very early in the morning - but he - he had a picture of a horse facing the other way, one time, and it stayed there for some little while until he suddenly recognized that the phrase underlying the thing - and which phrase when touched made the picture go away - was a colloquial expression which means the posterior of a horse. You see that? Now there's automaticity. These pictures suddenly appeared anytime anybody moved him on the time track.

Yesterday I said, "How far south do you have to go?" Well, you're liable to process some preclear for five or ten minutes on "Where aren't you in the past?" And you understand that it's "Where aren't you in the present time?" of course, and then "Where aren't you in the past?" and "Where aren't you in the future?" And these things would go together. And you process him for five or ten minutes and you get a little line charge out of him and then you find out that he isn't several places in the present and so he feels better. And you think you have done the technique. Oh, no, you haven't!

Very few people here in this class - in fact, nobody in this class, actually - is under such a duress. You're not getting pictures which pop around in front of your face and jump around and do strange and cute or interesting or upsetting things.

If you were to look into his mind you would find out that you had to play this parlay of "Where isn't he in the past?" "Where isn't he in the present?" "Where isn't he in the future?" For hours and hours and hours and hours - particularly, "Where isn't he in the past?" Because his certainty level as he first enters it is so low that he's only partially convinced he isn't. And only by trickery does he get any certainty on not being somewhere in the past because he thinks he's everywhere in the past if he's in pretty bad shape.

This brand of pictures is on the inverted language side. Language has turned its heels up and we now have pictures substituted for underlying words. Now get a little higher on the Tone Scale. Language is a substitute for pictures. Pictures are always primary; language is secondary.

A case that's really occluded and doesn't readily exteriorize thinks he's practically everywhere in the past. And some Step I's after they have been neatly and nicely exteriorized and have pretty good perception still think that they're everywhere in the past. Well, that's just their postulates carrying them forward and they're not escaping - they - they've escaped the body's randomity but, what do you know they haven't escaped their own masses of randomity and can't even see them or look at them. They're hidden, but good.

So that we're going down, as we see that automaticity suddenly pop up in terms of pictures, instead of the words, which are immediately underlying the pictures in the engram, we see the next stage which is pictures being replaced by words which were never spoken, which had no origin, but being run grandly and with wild abandon by the preclear as an engram. And this is what is known as dub-in. First we had - you have sonic, and then picture dub-in, see, pictures for the sonic and then below that we have words representing the pictures with full sonic - complete automaticity on language.

So how do you bail them out of this? Exteriorized or interiorized, you're having a lot of trouble with a case, just figure it: He's spread over the past, he's spread over the present and he's spread over the future.

And this is only - there's nothing more worrying or upsetting than this. It's simply a language machine which started out handling the preclear. And the construction of the machine has to do with setting up symbols called pictures, and then setting up symbols called sound or written words in lieu of the pictures, and then pictures cropping up in lieu of the sound and written words and then being replaced again by sound and written words. Then you've got one of these multiple-deck sandwiches which has to do with words and pictures. And the whole of it consists of pictures and words engraved on force from some time in the past. See what a language machine would look like.

How long does it take you to beat this out? How long is this technique good for? It is a Straightwire technique and is good forever. It's an unlimited technique. And this will solve the trouble. Just giving it to you now here just so we can "ruin" all these beautiful cases - and we will ruin them now - he said sadly. People won't be walking around playing "the beautiful sadness of" in this class. But you've seen all these other things in demonstration except this randomity; I want to see - want you to see that demonstration as resolving automaticity.

Now, how does this come about? You very often - if you had a very low-toned preclear who was having a lot of trouble, you found him sitting with his nurse watching a picture book. This was - you know, you'd say, well, he had some good connotation with pictures or this was some defense or something of the sort. No, he was just interested. And you found that he was - he was very - very easy for him to pick up these visios of somebody showing him pictures.

Oh, and by the way, I've got to make one remark with regard to that. I just remembered something. I... And it's on the subject of forgettingness so I, of course, would park it. And that is when you run this randomity technique you're going to run into the inevitable consequence of knocking a preclear who's not in too good shape, knocking his memory into the well-known cocked hat. Because part of every automaticity is "forget it."

How do they teach a child language? That's how we construct the machine. They show him a chair - and it's seldom that anybody has to do this because the word occurs often enough so that he can observe and connect it. Get that: connect it. They show him the chair and they say "chair." So he makes a picture of the chair and then expresses the picture by the sound waves "chair." Okay?

When you start to get him being the things which are attacking him and attacking the body and all the other combinations that can be run, you're attacking, immediately, straight into the heart of postulates which say "Forget." And so his memory will just go to pot on you, but fast. And he will come for his next appointment staggering, saying, "I - I ca-can't remember what I had for breakfast. I mis- I mislaid my - uh - I mislaid something this morning. I'm not..." If you want to know what's happened to somebody's memory is they have done just this trick: They have chosen something out for randomity and then afterwards have decided that it wasn't so bad and have tried to patch it up and their memory went to hell. Because they were processing themselves with their own actions in present time and they keyed in the automaticity in the postulate. That's what a bad memory is and that's all it is: a fellow's postulates catching up with him in the final analysis.

Now other chairs occur and these are also chairs. So all of this horde of pictures becomes "chair" or "chairs." And that one symbol now is standing for this huge mass of pictures. Now someone shows him a picture of a chair, and that's a chair, too. Well, you know, at that level of training it comes as a little bit of a shock that a picture - something on - colors on a piece of paper can represent a MEST object. This is a - this is a big shocker. This is so much of a big shocker that some of the tribes of Africa - where psychologists always go when they are trying to prove the unprovable, but they only go to them in the pages of the printed brochure brought back by some explorer as to why he should go on another expedition - these boys in Africa can't make that bridge. Or won't. Or they're too bright to. I don't care how you evaluate it, the point is that you show them a photograph, a colored photograph of themselves and they want to know what is it - a fish? What is it? This? What is it? That?

Well, but how did they catch up with him? He chose something out for randomity and then decided it wasn't so bad and so he sided with it too and tried to close the gap. Well, of course, he didn't even vaguely run it out and it keyed in the automaticity connected with all such subjects and all of those are sitting on "Forget."

They realize you're trying to tell them that it's something else than what it is, and so they just get sarcastic. It isn't anything else! It's a piece of cardboard with some colors slapped on it 6r some black marks on it, that's all. That's a facsimile, too. What's a facsimile? Well, it doesn't belong to anything else; it's itself. Well, you get this association.

The implant one gets between lives which tells him to forget is nothing; that is not even worth sneezing about. It could only work if some other factor were happening. That's true of all implants: They could only work if they fall across a natural consequence in the business of living. And this one about automaticity and randomity when you - when the hypnotist says "Forget" and the patient forgets, he is depending entirely, not upon implants, but upon this fact that when one chose some randomity and then didn't want the randomity, he forgot. And his memory just started to go to pieces.

Well, association takes place too tightly so that everything becomes connected with everything. You know, that's no space. And the way you do that is to take the space out of a person. And to get a person really smart so that he will associate everything with everything, which goes for smartness in this society, you simply put him in a room, consistently and continually, through all the formative years of his life, where he can't have any space; he winds up "smart." Only, does he? No, he winds up with a machine called an educational machine which - the se]f-willed brute - almost never, afterwards, feeds him the right data at the right moment.

Now, the index of memory is the index of how much randomity one has chosen out, first, and then been sorry for and tried to patch up, second. He forgets. That - that's all there is to it. So be sure that you know this because you're going to run into it. And if you don't know this, it will worry you. It'll sure worry your preclear!

You know, he says, "Let's see, Gee, that's a pretty butterfly," he'll say. And the damn machine goes into operation and it says, “That's a Lepidoptercaterwaul." And he looks at it and he says, "What do you know, a Lepidoptercaterwaul."

Now, in running this other process, this is an unlimited technique, it is a Straightwire technique and in Clinical Procedure is the technique which you should use on every case that does not immediately respond at Level II.

The machine has been in operation, now, for another fifteen years and he sees this beautiful butterfly flying by and it's going flop, flop, flop, flop, flop, flop. Instead of looking at the butterfly, he just gets the impression of the butterfly - a millionth of an inch of butterfly - and then he's immediately by-bypasses not just the butterfly, but Lepidoptercaterwaul, and goes into the fact that his second wife used to press butterflies in books or whatever you do with butterflies - I think you stick pins in them while they're alive or something, to collect them - and this reminded him, without any further inspection by himself and without knowing he has inspected it, that she was very, very fond of cooking and this makes him hungry. See, you get everything connected with everything. And we're right back to Book One: A=A=A=A, you see.

You run Step I just - just like this, you know: "Be three feet back of your head," or five feet or whatever you want.

So a Lepidoptercaterwaul flies by and because he's got a machine that initially connected up everything to associate everything with Lepidoptercaterwauls, he's hungry. Well, it's complete illogic but there's where the machine has broken down and there's most machinery.

The guy says, "Uh-huh."

It is fantastic the amount of force which has to be applied to a thetan to make him take on one of these machines. But because of the inverting dynamic factor, that which he resisted he begins, after a while, to desire. First - then he can't have it, you see, and then after a while he desires it. And we go through that cycle and people start to want these machines. And then they go into engineering and work for General Motors or the atom bomb project. In other words, they go completely crazy. And they're making all the time, then, automaticities, automaticities that are supposed to keep on running after they have been... So on. So the whole society is set up to do an automaticity.

You say, "All right. Now be in the first corner of the room, second corner of the room."

Everybody, at last, is getting ready endlessly with equipment to play a game but the game itself somehow never starts. And then they lose sight of the fact that there is a game, and there never will be a game, and they just - they say, "Well, now we're working." And then after a while they have no goal in working and that becomes pointless so they stop working. And what do you have there? You have people who can't work. Well, how the hell did they get there? Same way the fellow got from Lepidoptercaterwaul to being hungry. See? Same cycle is being run.

He says, "Uh-huh."

Well, these machine look like multiple-decker sandwiches and they're composed of meaning sandwiched by - with experience, with meaning, with experience, with meaning, with experience, with meaning, experience. And when you take a bite of one of them, they're very indigestible.

And you say, "Now, be over the street."

Now, the final take-out-of-space of something is to identify everything with everything, isn't it? You're looking at a preclear - anytime - anytime you're looking at an educated person in this modern society, you are unfortunately (and I don't care whether he's educated by himself or educated by the state), you're looking at somebody who has been associating everything with everything at such a mad rate, without getting enough space, that you're going to have to work like mad as an auditor to get some space into him. Because the past is the present is the future is Lepidoptercaterwauls.

"Okay."

The very best shape of the very best and sanest, average Homo sapiens in this society today, after the state and the hospitals and so forth have finished with him - the very, very best shape that he'd be in would be stark staring mad. Let's not hit lightly on it.

"Now, let's duplicate the street."

The pc who walks in for an appointment is generally running on such a piece of machinery, and so much machinery, that you just have to dig and... If you were going to do it on - on the basis of Dianetics, where you were going to take apart the machinery, you would have to be an awful smart auditor and you'd have to be awfully quick and you'd have to put in an awful lot of time.

"Okay."

So that's why, today, we're taking the Pc out of the machinery, which is exteriorization. That's to get the Pc out of the machinery. And that's the best answer to automaticity, is exteriorization. Now, that's a real good answer. You'll find out while he's exteriorized... You ever notice this? See how observant you are.

"Let's blow it up."

When he's well exteriorized and certainly, even though he's still using his mouth and vocal cords, he says, "Yep. Yep. Yeah, I can see that. Nope. Yep. That's right. Nope. Uh - I did that. Yep. No." You put them back in the body again and they say, "Yes. No. I don't know. Just a minute. Yes. I don't see that."

"All right."

All right. Let me call to your attention a case I processed the other day. This is - I told you about it before; now let me tell you about it again. Exteriorization: Rrrrrrrrr! Fine shape; all over the place; straightened her all out; got a lot of distraction off; so forth. She got up to go - put her back in the body - she got up to go, stood up, and almost fell flat on her face; not because of the sudden change of balance mechanisms near so much as the fact that that alteration of balance was being influenced by so much energy pounding around her on the subject of automaticity. So exteriorized she was in wonderful condition; and the second that she was interiorized she was in terrible condition all over again in spite of my auditing. But because I'd exteriorized her, all I had to do was flip her out again, adjust a few mechanisms, throw away a little bit of energy, square her around. But her communication lag while interiorized was still very, very marked.

"All right. Let's be in the center of the sun."

Why's this?

"Okay."

Well, you took the person out of the machinery, out of the automaticity, out of the multiple-deck sandwich; because there's where the deposits, the pictures, the words, the machinery, the automatic responses are - right there in the body. If a person could operate one of these bodies from about five miles away, he'd be in real good shape all the time; very fast communication and so forth.

"Now let's be in the Camden sewer system."

The body, oddly enough, being pounded by this much enthusiasm and fast communication and so forth, would not necessarily be better off (don't make that mistake), because it'd get worked in various ways, shapes and forms. It would not necessarily be better off; it ordinarily is but not necessarily. And as the time goes by, more and more of that stuff is going to cave in on the body - the body's going to rearrange and readjust itself one way or the other

"Okay."

So you see that there's more to this automaticity than met the eye. If you can imagine somebody sandwiched in the middle of a jabbering menagerie, a couple of insane asylums, three or four radio sets, eight or nine TV sets all playing on different channels, and all this stuff going simultaneously at him, giving him significance, reasons and connections and associations, you've got just about what's happening in the body.

You see? I mean, this guy's working like a shot.

That a thetan can remain stable and select out of this enough to remain sensible is one of the greatest feats you could possibly imagine. It is a great feat to be able to do this. So don't be surprised that your preclear is in bad shape; be surprised that he's in good shape. Now, some of the boys have a remarkable time of it in trying to patch together part of their machinery and another part of their machinery and another part of their machinery and try to make up some other kind of new machinery out of it.

What's happened? Well, why does he suddenly work like a shot? Well, he was a Step I and when you exteriorized him his troubles blew up because he moved out of the body's automaticity. The second he's out of the body it's just... Now, he'll come back into the body or near the body and be operating with the body again. He'll have a tendency to communicate much more slowly and remember much more poorly.

We find a machinist who is trying to change his trade and the darn fool doesn't have enough sense simply to go out and get a job as a ditch digger or get a job as a bus driver or something of the sort; he's got to get a job vaguely associated with, at least, the job which he just quitted. See?

But exteriorization is the technique. Don't overlook that. It's - that is the gimmick. Exteriorization, bang! He's out of the middle of the ridges.

So he's starting now to patch together - well, you figure he can do this and he can do that and he can do something else and therefore, if he can do all of these things, why, glory, that's fine; he should be able to take enough of his training and make something out of himself Well, actually all you'd do, if you put him in a job which has a great deal of - and here we go, randomity - is you selectively key in and out all this machinery. And the chances are you're going to key in more parts of it than needed and your boy is going to get pretty confused.

Step II. He didn't do that immediately. He didn't be three feet back of his head. "Well, mock up your own body out there in front of you. Now get it turning it around. Mock it up again. Mock up two or three of them. Mock up three of them. Okay. Mock it up out there in front of you. All right, now be behind it."

You know the fellow who's jack of all trades? Well, the fellow who's really jack of all trades is master of all trades unless he's been trained. And the one trick the society pulls on him is tells him he must be trained; he's got to be trained for this trick. "Yup, takes about twenty-five years to make a good design machinist. Takes about twenty-five years." The poor guy, he had real good ideas before he studied it real hard, then he became very unhappy and then he didn't like it. Because nobody likes to be run by a machine.

He says, "Okay."

So you can expect a society to go on the cycle of being educated toward a goal which they will eventually detest. Don't let that happen to you as an auditor. The only excuse we have for educating anybody at all is so we can uneducate them. The education which - which I'm using is so slight compared to the enormous hammering and pounding that the preclear has received that it's totally justified since it will undo the other part.

Now you have to drill him a little more carefully. But if you have to go to holding corners of the room, you haven't got time for it in the clinic. You understand? You just haven't got time for it. You can fool around with it in a drawing room and it's lots of fun, but it's too slow. Because what's wrong with this fellow? He's stuck on the time track. Now, you can run Change of Space Processing and get him unstuck on the time track.

Well, randomity, then, gets going in the middle of the machinery. We have all these automatic machines and these ridges and these multiple-decker sandwiches of words and pictures and all of that; and we've got all of this and that and something else; and now we've taken pieces of the machine and combined them with pieces of the machine. And each time these things were made to run faster than the preclear - every time. So that the preclear then thinks he can sit back and rest while the machine does the job.

By the way, you can run Change of Space Processing - "Be in the place where somebody died," and "Be here" - on a case that has some certainty on being around and you will actually spill grief charges which will materially affect the case.

Just why he wants to rest is a - is a mystery which he has never solved. Because he finds out that although he talks about it all the time, what he means is - it's lack of differentiation - he wants to have a rest from all this automaticity, which means, actually, that he really wants to get busy on his own initiative. And that's what a rest is; a rest is "let's get to work," in the actual definition of what he's doing. Because if he's to get himself enthusiastic and so forth about society once more, why, he'll have to be free. Of what? Of automaticity.

You can also just sit down and run a secondary, but you haven't got time for that in a clinic. If you want to run a grief charge out clinically, why, just boot them to the place where the grief charge was received and boot them back again; and boot them around on Change of Space Processing until you've shed the grief charge if it's right there to be run.

Now, it's a strange thing that you can use automobiles and motorcycles and tractors and airplanes and eggbeaters and all sorts of automaticities if these themselves are simply set up to serve a machine which is already principally automatic. You can use all that with great ease to free you from continuous monitoring of a body.

And immediately one did "Mock up the body," exteriorized, okay, drills, fine. But you say, "Mock up the body. Mock up the body. Mock up the body. Mock up the body. All right. Now be five feet back of the body." He isn't? You go right straight into this process: "Where aren't you in the past?" "Where aren't you in the present?" "Where aren't you in the future?" And you give about five questions about the past for every one you do about the present and every so often one about the future. And you'll find out he's buttered all over the universe - ordinarily. And all you do is just centralize him and stabilize him. And then he - then get him certain he's in his head by moving him out of his head and moving him back in again; and then move him very gently out of his head; and then get him out of the areas of automaticity. And then just running drills.

Continuous monitoring of a body is onerous. And the reason why it's onerous is because on the subject of bodies you've gone down scale through curious, desire, enforce, inhibit and then you wanted one again. The only reason there was a desire on the line at all, was just like there was a desire on collecting a lot of facsimiles or mock-ups - stealing somebody's facsimiles. This is just - just a game. But this game gets real earnest - real solid game.

And if he shows any tendency to be unstable while he is exteriorized, you give him this process: "Where aren't you, where are you?" Geographical location. Past, present and future.

So, as long as one has to continue to use a body, he will continue to run through the fight of automaticity versus self-determinism. That's what it amounts to. And that is the fight that any preclear is fighting. Only your preclear is on the losing side because he was always better when he set up the machine than after he began to use it - always better. Because the use of any automaticity is a use of one's own self-determinism to set up other-determinism which one does not thereafter self-determine.

How many hours will a Step V take of "Where aren't you in the past?" How many hours will he take? I don't know. I don't know how many hours he'd absorb, actually, because it starts on a geometric progression after a while. But I've had them so darned variable that I couldn't even make a clinical record of it. One fellow was just fine after about half an hour of it; another fellow was just swell after about five hours of it; another guy was just swell at twenty hours but taking more of it from another auditor I handed it over to do to him. I mean, how liberally - it's - you see, there's an infinite variety of case. And the variety is: How loused up is he about geographical position, past, present and future? How bad off is a case? A case is as bad off as he is disoriented. How worried is he about time? He is as worried about time as he cannot establish his geographical location.

And a person enters into automaticity only when he is no longer able to have, by his own lights, self-determinism. When he realizes he can no longer be self-determined, then he has to have automaticity. And he gets that way because he set up some automaticity in order to keep from using all of his attention. So attention was the first thing that got scarce; he doesn't think he has enough attention to run every unit and truck, for instance, on a highway. The hell he doesn't.

Now, I'll give you a trick about this. You ask this fellow several times - let's take this real extreme case - and you ask him several times, "Where aren't you in the past?" You see, if he can't say, "I'm not somewhere in the present," you've immediately got to go into the past. But you should ask this question anyway.

I was running five cars last night for a short time. It was very interesting. It was amusing. This wasn't anything I was doing just to bemaze and amuse and so forth; I just got tired of driving the car I was driving. So I drove two cars simultaneously three inches apart. It was a very confused driver in the next car because he couldn't turn his steering wheel.

You're hitting circuits right on the head and you'll plow the things out, and then another circuit will show up and you'll plow it out, and another one will show up and you'll plow it out and all of a sudden he's in good shape. But after you - you've processed him for fifteen minutes and he apparently is in good shape, why, you see him the next day and another circuit is there. It's because you didn't exteriorize him. See, he's back in the middle of the machinery.

Now, I had two cars that were three inches apart, front fender and back fender, and they were just going like mad down the road - two-pass, you know, these double-lane highways. And they were both hitting about sixty-five. And it was very interesting. But the body was very obedient, very good automaticity on driving, you see. All you had to do was activate his ridges to drive precisely for a change. He used the same amount of care he would have applied to just before he hit a wreck or something of the sort - you know, the same amount of care he would have used just after he was in a wreck - to go like hell.

What's a circuit? It's a thinking machine. So he's up against these circuits and they go into activation. So you just keep threading them out. Because every circuit depends upon a misconception of geographical position; two spaces have become one space. Now here's a trick. Give you this little trick. He - you ask him, "Now, where aren't you in the past?"

And it was a terrible strain on the ridge and when the ridge blew up I decided that was enough and - and guided my car back over into - it got - what got into me that I would do such a thing? Well, I say, well, I was only making a scientific test and finding out whether or not this could be done. That's not true. That's not true. It's just - I could tell you that, but that's - it doesn't happen to be true.

All he'll say, "I don't know. No, I don't know."

I just did it because it's a long drive out to Medford Lakes. There's a limited number of things you can do. You can amuse yourself by thinking, you can amuse yourself by mock-ups or you can amuse yourself by influencing other-determinism.

You say, "Well, where - where were you in the past during an operation?" (Well, if you've spotted him on the E-Meter as being stuck in this operation, this is - this is just dynamite, this technique.) You say, "Were you in the next room to the operating room during the operation?"

And it's very interesting when you set up yourself as an automatic machine - as an automatic machine to parallel the automatic machines already set up around bodies. You set yourself up as an automatic machine around a waitress, for instance, and you'll get some real randomity immediately.

"No!" Certainty.

So you can use automatic machinery for the production of randomity, but remember that when one sets up an automatic machine he sets up at the same time "I can't do it all." And you'll find people running on this: "I can't do it all." And that's just so they can set up some automatic machinery so they can't do it all. They can do it all. You get the difference? That's the truth of the matter: They can do it all.

In other words, you sneak him in to take a look by having hini be in places where he couldn't have been, And you'll have to fish around with this case for some little time probably before you find that factor of where is he next to that he was never in. Sometimes the case will tell you, "Well, I might have been in there." So let's give him some other places that he couldn't have been in.

If you were any good as a driver at all - and we're talking about you as a thetan now, we're not talking about a thetan-plus-body Homo sapiens - if you were any good as a driver at all, you could sit here and get this entire dissertation this morning and drive five or six cars out there on the street and send a speed cop all over town arresting everybody for no reason whatsoever and just giving out tickets like confetti. For the sake of what? Randomity. Motion. That's all. Motion.

"Well, all right. While you were in New York City," (we'll get by dates now) "while you were in New York City in 1936, were you in South America?"

But when you are convinced that you have no right to influence other-determinism and you are already running automatically, you won't engage in randomity, you will try to lower randomity.

"No," he'll say.

When you have no right to influence other-determinism, you'll cut madly into your own sphere of randomity and so you'll run slower. And when you run slower, more and more machinery can knock you around. And when you've really got the machinery knocking you around madly, you get occluded.

"Were you in South America - were you in South America in 1939?"

Now, why do you get occluded? What's this an answer to? Well, you're hiding from your own machinery.

"No. No!"

Now, what are you trying to audit when you audit a preclear? Well, by golly, you'd better not be auditing a machine. And there are several cases in this class that have successfully, with great success - up to when I started springing these bear-trap techniques in the last few days - very successfully gotten their machinery audited. But machinery is cheap; you can get lots of it and you can set it up very rapidly. Preclears as beings aren't quite that cheap. So remember that you could be auditing a machine.

See? We just slip it to him very easy. Obviously they weren't in South America. Sometimes you'll even find a case even then if they're real batty, why, they, "I don't know, I might have been. At night when I went to sleep I used to - I get the idea that I was dreaming, and so forth, and I'm not quite sure."

Now, the way to keep from auditing a machine is to use techniques which are immediately applicable to the thetan. And there are several techniques which are used on a thetan interior which apply only to the thetan. So let's recognize the difference between subjective-objective processing; interior processing and exterior processing. Every time you stir the thetan up interiorly, you activate some sort of a machine. Now, you could keep stirring him up and keep the machines caving in. The only excuse you'd have to do this is if you were speeding him up; otherwise he will hit his speed factor and away he goes.

Well, give them some place they're sure somewhere on the track. But remember that you're asking them to look where they aren't. And it's easy for them to look where they aren't, but it's hard for them to look where they are. And in this way you slide the whole time track off of them just as nicely and neatly as you please.

Now, how do you lick automaticity in somebody who is still interiorized and you can't get him out? And how do you lick it on somebody who is exteriorized and is still going on using a body? You lick it by resolving randomity.

And if we'd had this technique when we were working with Book One, we'd have had so damn many Clears you couldn't have counted them. Because you just use that technique, all by its little lonesome to make Clears - MEST Clears who are not exteriorized. And you just go on hour after hour after hour after hour and you just shake the whole universe apart on somebody. Probably wouldn't have taken you twenty hours to make a Theta Clear. Of course, all you want, to do it, is to do it up to the point where you can slip the guy out of his body and he's on his way. Anything gets wrong with a case, give them that one.

The most direct approach to automaticity is the resolution of the problem of other-determinism, because the machine is other-determinism. And how does other-determinism come into being? It comes into being by selecting something out for an opponent. And that is the way a person gets into randomity.

Okay?

How does one produce randomity? Now, I said I could send a speed cop, or you could send a speed cop all over town arresting people and giving them out tickets like confetti. Well, there'd be two reasons why I was doing that. One, I was choosing the police force out for randomity. What would this do to the police force? What validity would their tickets have - for after a while? Just none. Nobody would pay any attention to them at all. Everybody would have to fire all the traffic cops, so forth. This would be choosing out the cops as randomity.

Call it a morning.

Now, supposing I did this and was very amused about it for three or four days, but they yet hadn't abandoned or abolished police force? (Of course, I start in with just basically the idea of being amused about a police force.) All right, I do this for several days and they yet haven't abandoned the police force and I'm tired of it. See, it's a good game while it lasted but - I've figured out some other game.

[end of lecture.]

Well, I could actually set up some kind of a circuit, which you would say "an implant," which would sit out in the middle of the police station, and which would simply put a tremendous compulsion in every traffic cop to give tickets to everybody for - and to dream up things for the person to have done so they could give them tickets. And I'd walk off from that then.

And then one day - I'd forgotten all about it because that's the way you have to set the thing up automatically, is you have to forget about it. In other words, take your attention off of it. But then you have to set up circuits so that some of your attention gets to it. So you put it on a circuit - shunt system so that you have lookout posts and there's all sorts of awareness and alertness posts and memory posts and things like that. And when you think a thought you get this one beam of energy - you're going to use energy to think this thought, you see, that's the first stupidity that you could engage in - and you're going to fix it up so this thought goes around through all of these outposts and activates, one way or the other, all the lookouts and then activates all the other - all the machines that you've got running and they'll go flick and twitch and go into operation.

Now, you see, I'd be down here - I'd forgotten all about it, you see, and be driving down the street minding my own business, and a cop would come up and give me a ticket! And I'd say, "Well, blankety-blankety-blankety-blankety-blank! What's the idea of this?" Well, in this indirect fashion, I had chosen out the police force for randomity. It started out as a good joke and all of a sudden the engineer is hoist with his own petard. (That, by the way, I found out was being blown up by a bomb. That was very interesting. They didn't tell me that in high school.)

So the choosing out something for randomity, just directly, as a self-determined thing, that's one thing; but setting up some randomity which then makes a person a victim is quite another thing. But the things that this has in common with all other randomities is just that: randomity.

We want more motion, so we have opponents. Well, it's the hidden opponents that we ourselves have set up which really foul us up. We set up something and then by this circuit - quite like the police force - we finally fall into our own traps. Who set up all these theta traps through the universe? Well, you did, of course. See?

Now, you get somebody as he goes down scale and he's running lower and lower in speed, slower and slower speed - he begins to complain that people are after him, people have got it in for him, that the inflow is so tremendous that he's being hammered and pounded by so many things that he's real upset that he can't function. It's true enough; he can't function.

Well, what's hammering and pounding him? Is it other people? No, hell, they're just people. They can't hammer and pound anything. But he sure can pound and hammer himself with his own automaticity. And how did he get that way? Because it accidentally slipped into a randomity - a forgotten and hidden randomity. In other words it had just skidded out of sight and now it's kicking him.

And that ridge he complains about, caved in on his nose, Was set up by no other person than John Q Preclear - he's the one that set it up. That facsimile, which he says is terribly agonizing, and so forth, be made into, at some point of the track, or put into shape, at some point of the track, of a machine, And these machines are composed of facsimiles, And he's all of a sudden experiencing all sorts of agony on the subject of this machine.

What's the matter with him? It isn't that he has - because all this is a - is an indirect thing, and because it's hidden, it's a sort of a covert thing, it actually takes a technique line which in itself is rather covert.

All right. What do we have here? We take apart automaticity. Now, you've looked at automaticity. You've probably seen what it did and you've probably run some mock-ups of machines and blown them up and made them disappear. You probably found this wasn't terribly successful because this isn't the way you handle it; but you got acquainted, anyway, with the machine. Did you get acquainted with these machines?

All right. The way to handle it is to run a randomity process. And by running out the randomity, you will take the entire - to be impolite - the guts out of the automaticity. Now, you want to yank the innards out of one of these machines and just throw it on the scrap heap without worrying about whether or not you're coming up in speed, without worrying about the preclear's speed vector or anything of the sort; let's go straight into randomity and beingness. That's all.

The only way a person could get any randomity is to say he isn't something and then have it produce a conflict with him. Follow that? It's very simple. I mean, there's two books; they sit there for a long time and they never argue with each other till somebody comes along and says that one of the books is the reason why he should shoot somebody who is reading the other book. See, you've got to have an argument.

Now, let's take a checker game. Checker board will sit there. Checker men - they'll sit there for a long time; they won't move; nothing will happen to them. Fellow comes along and he says, "Well, I think this is a game of some sort. I'll sit down on this side of the board and put out the men and make a move. Now, I'll sit on the other side of the board and Ill make a countermove; and then I'll sit on this side of the board and I'll make a move; and I'll sit on the other.”

He says, "Hell, I'm playing myself, you know, and this is dull! Now, let's see. I'll even..." He usually says, "Well, I'll get somebody else to play me a game of checkers." He gets some perfectly good friend of his and the next thing you know they're involved in a terrible-throat-cutting argument on the subject of whether that king was legitimate or not. You see?

The next thing that he would do, actually, if you were plotting this out early on the track, would be, he would simply mock up somebody else - this is what your basis is on automaticity - he'd mock up somebody else and then give that person an independent memory and motivation so that he'd have an opponent to play checkers with.

And then this person would become a deadly enemy of his and would have other-determinism and would go off someplace and it would be entirely different and you'd have two new civilizations starting up and then a war being fought and all this sort of thing on - what happened? Well, he set up some randomity, and then with it set up the fact he had to set up the fact that he must forget that he made the other person; he must forget that he made the machine. And every preclear is doing that today.

And learning language is "I must forget that I have learned." One of the things you can do to an actor - you can just ruin an actor - is ask him several times how does he produce such an effect with his words; how does he say this? And this fellow, if he's been in the business for quite a while and is running mostly on machinery, will just be shattered. He'll go up in front of a microphone or on a stage and he'll say, "B-b-b-b-b-shhoo." He won't know what to do, how to talk, anything.

How do you do that? You say, "How do you produce such an effect?" You smile sweetly. And if he's producing that effect on an automaticity, the automaticity will cave in because you started to knock out one postulate out of it which is that he must forget it.

See, he has to examine and he, for a moment, scans and examines his skill. And the second he does this he sets into activation the entire machinery, and not in good order because it's delicately set up. You must never forget this about automaticity: It's real difficult to set one up so that it will be functional and that you never remember it. This is real, real hard to do.

It's - how hard is it to hide something from yourself? Supposing you made up your mind right now that you were going to take some possession of yours and hide it. Now, I want you to take some possession. (You've got a cigarette lighter) Each one of you take a possession of yours and determine you're going to hide it. Now determine you're going to hide it - a MEST object; now determine you're going to hide it. Now, what do you have to do to hide this possession from yourself?

Male voice: What possession?

Yeah, what... Yeah, that's right. What do you have to do? You have to answer your questions that way. A guy has gotten to a point as a thetan; he's done this so darned often he isn't even there; he's hiding himself at last. You got what postulates you'd have to make in order to do this? Have you sensed all of a sudden that there's a little difficulty with regard to it? You haven't, huh?

Well, now, how do you hide things from yourself? How do you hide things from yourself?

Male voice: Well, I just decide I never had it.

Uh-huh. Well, how do you put them away so that you won't uncover them accidentally?

Male voice: Well, if I don't have them, I don't have to put them away.

Mm-hm. Well, how do you produce such an effect?

Male voice: You run simply...

Male voice: "Have to forget."

Yeah. But if you made a postulate, a thin, little thing like a postulate, on hiding what you just hid, the fact that you were being asked how you made these postulates would certainly not throw it into light but stir it up. And you become kind of anxious about hiding it; that's one thing you mustn't look at. And that's basic on "Mustn't look at." See?

And then this goes on down to the point where the person doesn't know his past from his present from his future, where everything is connected with everything because he must have hid it all because he couldn't have hid it all and he knows in desperation at last, "Look, look, honest to Pete, me, I really done it." See? I - that's an indicator on a technique.

Let's - let's recognize, now, that randomity is at least two-sided. Probably very often some people set up such things as triangular wars. I fought a lovely triangular war one time, There's a real triangular war went down in the Southwest where the Indians were fighting Americans and Mexicans alike, with no discrimination, and Mexicans were fighting Americans and Indians alike, with no discrimination, and Americans, same way; and it was a beautiful triangular war.

In Midshipman Easy, there's the wonderful triangular duel. Well, it wasn't an all-out affair; they did know who they were shooting at. They didn't get lost in it.

There are many ways you take apart randomity. But you take apart automaticity by knocking into pieces randomity. There's something wrong with randomity if the fellow has automaticity. So we don't pay much attention to automaticity because you're never going to get the preclear to look at what he's postulated that he can't look at. So you have to come in the side door and you start handling speed. And you handle speed directly by resizing that he chose something out.

Now, let's say we have this fellow who has a fear of disease. Here's one way to solve the randomity in this case. We'd say, "All right. Now be yourself as a body. Now be the disease attacking the body. Now be the disease attacking some other body." See that?

"Now be the disease; be your body. Be the disease." Basic technique is: "Be the disease. Be your body. Be the disease. Be the body. Be the disease. Be the body. Be the disease getting all through the body. Now, be all through the body resisting the disease." See?

In other words, we find a war in progress and we take it out by making the thetan, first, be both sides of it, then have him be willing to fight such a war which is the next thing you've got to solve and next by just being an observer of both sides of it. And because he's holding on to both sides of it, it'll collapse.

And what will go to pieces? A part of the machinery of automaticity which he's using is what will go to pieces. Figure out how that is? Well, automaticity starts to go to pieces. Well, he had to choose something out. And if he's got - he's - the body has a fear of disease, and if he, therefore, has shared this and sided on the part of the body against disease, then he has set up automatic machinery in the body in order to defend the body against disease. And then this machinery is resisting disease which is on the wavelength of disease which eventually will cave in and get to the point where it demands and desires disease.

Acceptance Level Process gives you an immediate test of this. Somebody has a phobia about some particular illness; if you just toss it up in the air a few times he'll find all of a sudden it's going right into the bank. He - you have him mock it up and he can't fend it off of him. He'll develop, if you run it, a feeling of great hunger for this disease. He's just going up Tone Scale, you see? And you can run it up high - as high on the Tone Scale as you want to.

It's a piece of automatic machinery is set up to resist something; it gets onto the same wavelength as that something and after that it - its screens and shields on protection, so on, cave in and it develops, then, an actual desire for the thing. In other words, there's just a vacuum of it set up there. You follow this?

So that by being the disease and being the body and the disease of the body, one is being both sides of something which is resisting something else. And then they just merge. But remember, you always have to solve the idea of fighting to resolve randomity. Now, any randomity is resolved in this fashion.

The fellow keeps talking to you all the time about ridges, ridges, ridges, ridges, ridges until you're ready to slit his throat. You get rid of one ridge, he's got another ridge for you. He's chosen ridges or energy out as randomity.

Now, choosing energy out as randomity is real peculiar in view of the fact that he's an energy manufacturing unit. He'll immediately wind up in an unwillingness to put out beams by which he himself can perceive; and it will also be unwillingness to exert effort, which we get eventually into the no-work band. And that is in common with all neurosis and psychosis: no work. So this is - this is a serious one; not that it's serious at the time he's doing it but it might get so.

So you have him be a ridge and attack the body, and then be the body and attack ridges, and be the body and withdraw from ridges, and be the ridges and withdraw from the body.

Now, after a while he'll get some very spooky feelings about this whole thing. He'll get real spooky about it because the body starts to get insensitive or starts to get too sensitive, and he'll get the idea of - of being the environment, and so forth, and he'll find out a lot of things about his case in a hurry.

Well, this universe, to a fellow who has gone away from using energy which he himself made, is a constant, pounding inflow and it's making the thetan a target - 360-degree sphere; he's a target. So you wonder why he's small, why he tries to escape from the body, why he tries to get out of this target area and that sort of thing.

Well, what's his trouble? All you have him be is the waves which are - the MEST universe waves and emanations which are pounding the body, the voices and noises which are pounding the body. "Now be the body. Now be the voices and noises pounding the body. Now be voices and noises pounding other bodies. Now be other bodies resisting." Be, in other words, be, rather than conceptually.

And how do you do this spatially? You get him to move into the actual space. And he'll find out he's in a hell of a mess if he's not exteriorized yet.

You say, "All right. Now, be the waves pounding the body." Well, he tries and tries to figure out. Well, maybe he could figure out he was outside the body and sort of collapse in on the body while still facing out of the body in order to be the waves which are attacking the body. And then to be in the center of the body he's got to back out and resist the body. This gets real complicated. See?

So then it'll suddenly occur to him that he's been sort of - he's been promoting waves to attack other people's bodies, too. Well, you can have him be those waves, and be bodies, and be waves attacking his own body, be sunlight attacking his own body and you'll restimulate all the sunburn in the bank. (It'll run out, though.)

Why? You don't have to run any of this stuff out. All you have to do is promote his willingness to be something.

Anything he's against, he's chosen out as randomity. And if he doesn't like being against it, then it's running on an automaticity; so you solve it.

You don't just solve all of his randomity. If you think you solve all of his randomity, that's wrong; you only solve that kind of randomity that's making him real complaintive.

He's doing it, that's the truth of the matter. Because he's unwilling to be these MEST waves pounding in, he can't get out of his body. And - or he's out of his body and he can't get in so he can get out.

You see how you resolve that, then? This is the essence; this is simplicity itself.

[end of lecture.]