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Clear Procedure IV: Q & A, Space

Clear Procedure IV: Test for Clears

A LECTURE GIVEN ON 30 JANUARY 1958A LECTURE GIVEN ON 30 JANUARY 1958

Yes?

Well, how's it going today?

Male voice: I can mock up anything and have it not be interfered by anything. . .

Audience: Good. Pretty good.

Mm-hm.

Now, I've been talking to you on a lot of impractical, theoretical material, and I wish to give you now the practical aspects of the state of Clear, and some tests concerning it.

Male voice:. . . with respect to myself.

There is a one-shot Clear. There really is a one-shot Clear. There's one postulate which, if you ask somebody to hold it in his head for a while, gruesome things would occur. There are many versions of this postulate.

Mm-hm.

By the way, this was a research test process. There have been a great, great many research test processes, few of which have ever seen the light of day. And only now have some of them become important. This is one. I just wanted you to know there is a postulate back of Clear.

Male voice: But until just a few days ago if I tried to get it with respect to the body, it was completely intolerable. Now, I have since understood, now, that getting it near the body or even located with respect to itdoesn't have to be near or farthat I discovered that the body universe is something in itself, and tolerating masses in that universe is different than tolerating them from me. I can mock up anything.

And the crudest version of it is just "desire to be familiar with." You just get the guy to get the idea that he desires to be familiar with — have him close his eyes and just get that idea and hold that idea, all sorts of gruesome things start occurring. It, of course, is not a therapeutic version. It's highly demonstrative, however, of what he is doing.

What's he talking about? What is he talking about?

Now, more of an applicable processing version is "trying to be familiar with." You have "Get the idea of trying to be familiar with." A more therapeutic version than that is "Regret having been familiar with."

Audience: (various responses)

Now, of course, all of these tests are out of old-time Concept Processing. Remember, you hold the idea, get the concept and so on.

I think you've got proximities going here. I think you were having — you were doing mock-ups in a favorite piece of space, someplace.

Some chiropractor, I understand, years ago after this was released out of early Scientology and so on, made an entire gimmick out of this. And it was down in Texas or someplace — disgrace to the state of Texas. But he probably loused up a tremendous number of people.

Male voice: Yeah.

Now, "regret to be familiar with," that isn't just a snide comment. I mean, it's very funny, you take a little piece of something as beefy as Scientology and go off over the hills with it and know nothing that surrounds it in any way. It's like somebody tells somebody to — all he needs is a pair of tennis shoes to walk across the Dismal Swamp, you know? Eight cottonmouth bites later, why, he ... This, of course, reduces havingness like mad.

And the second you cracked out of that sector, you got in trouble.

Now, we get down to a process that is almost therapeutic — almost therapeutic, is "Recall a time you desired to be familiar with time." Getting involved, isn't it?

Male voice: Yes, but I can still get them there and think clearly with them.

All of these things, however, are simply test processes. And its only value — its only value, really, is the fact that it, amongst all processes, will turn up more ridges and goofball manifestations faster than any other button, which, of course, is a test of this idea of becoming familiar with the four universes, you see. The idea of familiarization as opposed to conditioning, you see? And it is a test which differentiates between conditioning and actually just becoming accustomed to.

Well, fine. That's why we have them put before the body, behind the body, above the body, below the body . . .

A person runs out fear to become familiar. In other words, the whole idea of conditioning is running out an unwillingness to confront. You see? And that isn't running anything into the reactive mind at all, see?

Male voice: Yes, I know. This is very excellent.

The psychologist would just love you to believe the Pavlovian, Wundtian, "American" Psychological Association, Karl Marx dialectic materialism school of Let's-Do-'Em-All-in — would just love you to believe that if you implant somebody enough he gets trained.

. . . right and left of the body.

Now, this is what's wrong with American education today. It's why they're having difficulty with science. It's why Congress is just now about to make the greatest mistake of its existence in creating a Department of Science and Technology.

It ruins you, I bet.

The whole picture of " implant to know" is a totally incorrect look. It's not implant to know. One becomes familiar with "to know," and you actually run out fear of. Actually, the process of education is to erase restraint toward something. If you erase restraint toward something, then you achieve education.

Male voice: Yes.

If you implant somebody, then you achieve automaticity. You achieve a lower tone and a lessened ability. Modern collegiate education today is of the implant school. Then they want the implant back at the end of the term. And if you can't give them the implant back, you're not educated.

All right.

I'm well accustomed to this. I remember there's a dead mathematics which everybody has to have before he can take higher mathematics than that: It's called analytical geometry. But it — in essence, it's a dead mathematics. It itself, as itself, has no real application. I think the only practical problem that it solves is the area of an irregular body of land in surveying. I think you can do that in analytical geometry. If you have something with odds and ends of borders going north by east by south by west, and it's totally octo-nonrectangular, why, you can actually get its area if you plot it by analytics. So, I know of no other real application for this mathematics, and that's a highly, highly specialized use. And they insist, however, that you have this. Actually, there is some necessity to know something about graphs and slopes and things like that, before you go into another nonessential mathematics called calculus.

Now you see, people have been asking me, "Why do you do that? Why do you do that?" We've got a wonderful example. You can do it, eventually.

But the main point I'm making here is, is that this nonessential mathematics — dead mathematics — would actually be simply an exercise or a series of exercises in the logics of plotting. You know? That's about all it could be. And there'd be no real reason to get it right on the nose. You know? There'd be no reason to be precise about this confounded mathematics because it isn't going to go anyplace.

Male voice: Yeah, I know.

And that antagonized me. I was being asked to spend a whole semester studying this stuff, and try as I would, I couldn't find any use for it. So I got mean, I got mad and I invented a use for it. I found out that you could take the slope formula and apply it to aerial navigation and that it would work out your courses and speeds — which was just using that by taking the aerial maps they had of the day and plotting them as squares, you see, and then have their coordinates match up, and you could go from coordinate to coordinate on some kind of a formula. And you had to put it on a little ruler and you're all set — sort of a slide-rule affair. Clumsy, but it had some use. As a matter of fact, I sent it down to the navy just to say I'd sent it someplace. I knew it would go nowhere if it was sent to the Navy Department, so — good safe thing to do.

You must have had a favorite zone. You probably had some little piece of the home universe you were still nursing.

We'll be* saying that tomorrow about the Department of Science and Technology. How to dead-end something utterly — well, you send it to the Department of Science and Technology. I'm sure we'll be saying that. The government has the world's lousiest record, by the way, in the reception of science. It begins with the breech-loading rifle in the American Revolution, continues through the refusal of the torpedo from Robert Fulton. That's gorgeous. It has a wonderful record.

Male voice: Well, I find this very valuable for mocking up things.

But anyway, I knew that would dead-end, nobody would have any use for this. But there was still something that could be done with this. And I proudly presented the fact to the mathematics department at GW, saying that this dead mathematics could be made useful; it did have a sphere of application. And sounds like an exaggeration — they flunked me. They flunked me. I had to actually go up before the dean and the chair of mathematics and so forth, and insist on a complete examination in analytics before they would give me a grade.

I don't know that it's valuable. I think it's for the birds — invalidation. Hasn't your auditor told you that?

So be careful about making things practical when people have carefully and safely pronounced them dead. You see, there might be a liability to this.

Male voice: No, but I told him.

Now, if the human race has been pronounced dead, then we decide to wake them up, we're of course going to run into some trouble here or there. You see? We're going to run into a little bit of trouble. That's obvious. Well, the funny part of it is, we've run into the trouble. We've been there and back.

And then your auditor sat there and said, "Yes, yes," and was very agreeable.

Now, in the whole field of research and investigation you get a tremendous amount of dunnage, you might say. You get tremendous numbers of byroads. You get awfully tangled and involved sidetracks. And we've run down plenty of these — plenty of them. They're all over the place, until you could say the mind itself is an accumulation of sidetracks that you don't need. The best description of somebody's mind is that he has a sufficient number of sidetracks not to be able to do all that much.

Male voice: No, well I quit doing it because it didn't follow any command, and I find it very beneficial to follow a command.

Now, familiarity with a subject is not familiarity with mass. Familiarity with a concept is not familiarity with mass. And as a result, any attempt to run very long in this direction, to audit significances, to audit ideas only or to change the mind directly are, then, unfortunately doomed to failure.

God, it is good in auditing to follow . . .

You have to establish familiarity with mass before you can establish any familiarity with ideas. And the mass actually is — most of the people you audit are below being able to tolerate mass. And when they at once and immediately target significances and ideas, and bypass mass and not rehabilitate their tolerance of mass, they lay one of the more gorgeous pterodactyl eggs. You see that?

Male voice: I mean, this is . . .

Now, we get somebody to change his ideas about a tree before we make it possible for him to be on the cause end regarding the mass of trees. And all we succeed in doing is pushing him further into the soup. You got that?

This is — this is a common — a common thing. You're not a leopard with green spots.

Audience: Yeah.

Male voice: No, I didn't think so.

Now, it's not that — this is not correct. We're still talking about tests for Clear. This is not correct. Changing ideas directly is a fatal activity. You got that? That's not correct.

Very common.

But a case that cannot easily face a nothingness, or is facing nothingness because it cannot face a somethingness, the direct change of postulates and ideas becomes a fatality. Now, this is a highly limited truth, see? Now, the reason for this is an intolerance of mass causes the individual to look at nothingness. Let's go over this now. You understand this?

Male voice: My question is thisnow, let me get it straight. That I find that it is useful for purposes of thinking that I have used, I can mock these up so far from me in some special sector of space somewhere.

Audience: Yeah.

Sure.

Now let's apply our definition of Operating Thetan. And we'll find, then, that this-person looking directly at ideas or nothingness is not being cause.

Male voice: Where other people, apparently unable to do this, didn't do it, or couldn't think it straight.

What is being cause? The thing which is causing him to look at nothingness is an intolerance of mass which is not himself. So the intolerance of mass, then, continues to be cause. And we have explained then, all downgrade mysticism, all downgrade occultism and so forth.

All right. All right. All right.

Well, fantastically enough, we have actually isolated what is being cause: Intolerance of mass is being cause. Fear of familiarization — that is being cause. In other words, the cause is exterior to the preclear. And he, therefore, faces ideas and nothingnesses and significances and figure-figure much more happily than he will face a mass. But he doesn't get any better.

Male voice: But on the other hand, I would make a wreck out of my body because I was sohavingness for the bodybecause I couldn't tolerate a mass near to the body, or within something like several light-years or something.

Well, this is one of the nicest points in processing that you will ever meet. It took years to finally get around to a comprehension of just what I'm telling you now. Obviously, if everything is basically a postulate or a continuing postulate — which is to say a consideration — if everything is an idea, obviously we should have right at it. Process the ideas, and the fellow is all changed around and wham. Nothing to it, is there? All we had to do is process that. . .

It's fascinating. That's fascinating. That's fascinating. Well, does your auditor tell you how far in front of the body you should mock it up?

Unfortunately the Laman religion, the Buddhist, made this mistake two and a half thousand years before we came along. So they would get this oddity: They would take any twenty cases and one of them would feel better. Get this? And nineteen of them would spin in.

Male voice: No.

Why? Obviously if it's true, if — in Christian Science they say, "All is infinite mind." In fact I think they start every service with some kind of a statement concerning infinite mind. They say, "Look at the idea; all you have to do is look at the idea and you're all set." Well, before that, Siddhartha Gautama said all you had to do was conceive mind essence and you were a bodhi. See? Bang. See, that's all there was to it. Yeah. Yeah, for somebody who could tolerate mass. See? It was perfectly true, as long as the person they addressed it to could tolerate mass. Evidently Siddhartha Gautama could tolerate mass. And he never noticed that other people couldn't. And it's the tolerance or intolerance of mass, since that early time until now, which has held up the entire parade of progress in the field of the mind.

Well, all right.

In an effort to get some mass into it, the Euro-Russian psychologist has said there is only the brain.

Male voice: No, he's very good about it.

Yesterday a news story came out. The French, who have been making progress ever since they started to teach Dianetics at the Sorbonne — they were doing that several years ago. They've been making some interesting progress in the field of insanity. One of their projects, by the way, was to dress everybody up in a past period which agreed with their insanity. And they found they were not insane as long as they were in that surrounding. That's taken from our past track stuff.

Has your auditor given you an idea of a gradient approach to that?

A recent idea is a direct outgrowth of Scientology, immediate and direct. They couldn't quite buy it, you see, so they said, "Brains communicate with brains but not with voice." And they have worked out what they conceive to be a conclusive proof that people are not communicating with people by vocal sounds but are communicating with a brain vibration to a brain vibration. They took it off one type of vibration, air vibration, and put it on to some kind of an electronic vibration, and they think they've got it, you see? They're not actually — they haven't gotten anywhere, but it's an interesting observation for somebody to make. The substitution of brain for thought is one of the wilder divergences.

Male voice: Well, it's coming along fine.

But there's an earlier one even in the Aesculapian schools, which is a wilder divergence than that: the substitution of punishment for help. That's an awful flip, isn't it? I don't know how you would go about punishing a thetan with a club or an electric shock or a drug. I don't know how you would go about punishing him directly — no via mass, you see? But they've been trying it for an awfully long time. They have been punishing the mass with which a thetan was associated.

Yeah, it's coming along fine.

Now, get that as a dramatization of kicking away the idea of mass. Get psychiatric treatment as a dramatization against mass. Again, an intolerance of mass.

Male voice: And he does very well, and I'm doing it and it kills me but. . .

So in several fields, we have this whole idea of mass intolerance or intolerance against matter as being a primary stumbling block in the field of the mind. And evidently, nobody ever got around to looking at it and finding out why it was a stumbling block.

What are you doing, using physical universe space to mock them up in, around the body?

Now, our breakthrough, actually, takes place with the recognition of mass, matter — an intolerance of and tolerance of. Obviously, all you'd have to do is make up your mind to be Clear and be Clear. We've been saying that for years. But for some reason or other it doesn't happen. Do you see that? Well, the interposing link is matter. It's all very well for some religious leader to tell you that all is infinite mind or mind essence, and all you have to do is consider significances, change a few ideas. It's all very well for that to occur, but only for those people who can already tolerate mass.

Male voice: I was at first. It was totally awful.

But if you had a total mass tolerance, you would have a Clear. In other words, clearing has been possible when you had Clears. So we can then assume there was no actual doingness anywhere along the line. Somebody'd say to somebody — you've said this to somebody I'm sure, some preclear — you've just described to him a better state and he, all of a sudden, assumed it.

I'll bet that — I'll bet that was a pip.

Well, people observing in this particular field back through the years have all had that little experience occur, you know? They've had that experience. All of a sudden they sort of told somebody to get well and the fellow changed his mind and got well and so on. And they have tried and tried and tried to repeat the phenomenon with failure, failure, failure. In fact, this is the history of the Christian church. You understand that if you showed somebody a relic and he just decided at that moment that by seeing the relic he was now well, he would get an instantaneous recovery. But if you showed the next guy a relic, why, he thought that was fine but nothing happened. Yet they went on showing people relics and never tried to find out why the 78 percent that were shown relics did not immediately recover.

Male voice: It was. It. . .

About 22 percent of the race at any given generation is evidently tolerant of mass, and the remainder of the race isn't. And you get a 22 percent recovery no matter what you do for somebody.

I'll bet that was a killer.

Of course, we're asking psychiatry an embarrassing question. We're asking psychiatry why they're not getting their 22 percent? Because there is nothing in psychiatry that asks anybody to do anything. It's totally shock, mass, bang, crash, so forth, or talk him to death or evaluate like mad for him.

Male voice: Yes.

Psychoanalysis had the condition that if you isolated some past — the exact past experience — what a fantastic thing to assume that you only had one experience in your life that was aberrative. I mean, that is really an assumption of magnitude. But they thought that all you had to do — all they had to do was point this out to the fellow and he'd get well. Well, of course, they could get somewhere near their 22 percent. See? Because about 22 percent of the people they'd have anything to do with, so long as they were just taking people at random in the society as you would in a test series, why, you'd get — 22 percent of them would recover. They'd change their minds; they'd decide, well, it was — they were doing it in some fashion and they would change their minds, and they would get well and they would get over this.

You put a mock-up out without owning or taking responsibility for any of the space you put it in, you'll have a picnic, every time.

But in practice, the psychoanalyst was getting crazy people. And these people were intolerant of mass. So by test of broad strata in the society, you had psychoanalysis while being studied by Freud as successful at least to 22 percent. But the moment you began to practice it, which is to say you took selected cases, the percentage went rrrpp practically down to zero, till you really can't find anybody that's been helped by psychoanalysis. It's a pretty hard thing. I mean, auditors in scrounging around are fascinated by the fact that they can't find people who have been made well by psychoanalysis. They find somebody who has terminated a psychoanalysis, and this person is being careful and knows that if he goes on being careful and restraining himself enough that he will be successful in some limited sense. And the auditor doesn't think this is a very good test of freedom and so doesn't give psychoanalysis any handout. Don't you see?

Male voice: It's murder.

Any system, then, which asks the broad strata of the public simply to change its mind would have a cure wherever the person was already tolerant of mass.

Does that answer any part of your question? Does that clarify it?

Now, people are more tolerant of the type of mass you see in that wall than they are of the type of mass they find in their minds. So let's refine it, now, and find out what kind of mass tolerance we would address in order to achieve an immediate result in processing. And it would be the type of mass which is in the mind. Therefore, the address of that mass is primary in processing. And a tolerance of it in a very high degree of solidity, and a tolerance of the space and a tolerance of resulting energy, and also a tolerance of time or continuance, all, then, pursue a process and come out clean. And we have the preclear, then, able to change his mind.

Male voice: No.

We get him to work mental energy masses, spaces and so forth. And we, of course, work spaces without ever mentioning them. And we can actually, directly work energies today, which is quite amusing. You have him hold an invisible particle in front of him and keep it from going away. Nice, slick sort of process. You can have him hold a germ in front of him. You can ask him what he's holding it with, and he'll say, "A pair of steel tongs" or something like that.

You haven't answered anything yet.

And you say, "That's just fine, that's just what I want you to do." Of course, he's becoming tolerant of the steel tongs. He's eventually able to change his mind about invisible particles.

Male voice: No. This is my point: It seems to me like there's three tolerances of a mass. One is with respect to the guy, and one is located with respect to the body, which would be just the body space.

But in the final analysis, the whole trouble with invisible particles folds up the moment that mass tolerance takes place in this second universe of the mind. You see that? In other words, we had a nice great big hedge on this steeplechase of research, and that hedge was just this: mass — tolerant or intolerant. Was the preclear — could the preclear tolerate mass or was he intolerant of mass? And if he could already tolerate mass, then we could do almost anything with him. But if he could not tolerate mass, then we couldn't do anything with him. Hence we have havingness.

Four tolerances.

Now, there is no preclear in such good shape that he can't stand a little more tolerance of mass. So you can take this accidental: He can tolerate mass.

Male voice: And one with respect to the physical universe which is . . .

We take this accidental and what do we find? That it can be improved. So it's a gradient scale of tolerance. But any tolerance of mass will then cash in, in processing. And down below the line, intolerance of mass holds it up. Hence you're having him mock up things and keep them from going away. You are handling at once mass, movement and time. You're handling these three things. You are also handling obedience and control.

Four.

But let's take a much wider look at this, then, and take a look at the test for Clear. You'll be very interested, I'm sure, in tests for Clear because there are several attributes. These are totally mechanical, have nothing to do with ability in the broad world, have nothing to do with his intelligence, have nothing to do with his personality. It's a can or can't proposition. It's open and shut. There is no halfway gradient point. And we find, then, that the test for Clear, or the attribute which a Clear must have, or the attributes which he must have, are as follows:

Male voice: Well, I got three so far. . .

One, these mock-ups which you're asking him to make — this all comes out in the wash in the process you're doing — but he must eventually come to handling these things with postulate alone.

Four mass tolerances.

Now, don't try to handle them with postulate alone if you can't. Go on and handle them any way you please. I'm not evaluating for your case, I'm just saying, eventually it'll turn up that you're handling with postulate alone. You got the idea? They — not go away with postulate alone. They get very still with postulate alone. They become more solid with postulate alone. Do you understand that?

Male voice: That's real to me.

Audience: Mm-hm.

Thetan, mind, body, physical universe.

Well, as tolerance of mass improves, ability to postulate improves. It's a gradient scale for a long distance; a fellow almost can, but when he finally is able to postulate these things, boy, he can. See, it's just a fact.

Male voice: I don't get the one with regardseems to me if it's so far from himself, that would be a picture in your mind.

Now, how much better he can postulate than that is none of our business. We're not interested in how much better he can postulate than that. We're just interested in that one fact: He is doing that. You got that? That's number one question that would be asked of a Clear, is — is he postulating these things into existence or is he still beaming them, mauling them, using energy and masses to handle them? Using a mass to handle a mass denotes a fear of mass. And one sort of erases that and gets over to a point of where he can directly confront them. And when he can directly confront them, he can of course postulate them.

Aahh, aahh! You know in comic strips, where they have these electric light bulbs that appear . . .

There could be, you might say, a much cruder test than that which should have been the first one: is, can he mock up? But that is so crude it's off the line.

Male voice: Yeah.

We'll take the next one. And that is to say, he is null on an E-Meter on mocking up anything and doing anything with it; he remains null. Even though he is acting and reacting and so forth, actually it is not registering on a sensitive meter. And really, no matter how much one of these modern E-Meters is amplified, you will not find any registering. Now, the odd part of it is, it's a terribly safe test. Because anybody who would register on an E-Meter will also register when he lies.

. . . above people when they get the idea? I just got one, just now. I see what this is all about. We're just going to let you find that one out. Yeah, there's something there to find out, for you.

One of the interesting tests of an E-Meter is to set up the sensitivity and ask the person to say "no" to each question you ask him. And he says "no" to each one of these questions.

Yes?

And then you say to him, "Are you sitting in a chair?"

Male voice: It's this business of playing games with these mock-ups: Sometimes, you know, you set them out there, and after a while you feel darn certain you've sentset them out there, and you keep them from going away and so forth, but the auditor asks you that question. Well, last week . . .

He is sitting in a chair, and he says, "No." You get a reaction on an E-Meter.

What did the auditor ask you?

So you say, "Did you mock that one up?"

Male voice: Well, just if you're keeping them from going away.

He says, "Yes," he'll get a reaction on an E-Meter if he didn't. You see that? In other words, it's also a lie detector.

Yeah, all right.

So it's actually not possible to squeak by this one, unless you just chopped up the guts of the E-Meter so it wouldn't work at all.

Male voice: All right. Anyhow, I knew that they weren't going away, and I felt I was doing it, so I found some energy masses, hell and gone outoh, I don't knowhalf a mile, three quarters of a mile, something like that. So I started sticking them in there.

Well, almost anybody will register on an E-Meter if you bat him one on the back of the head. So you can tell whether or not an E-Meter is registering. See? You'd tap him back here, caress him back of the neck, something like this; anybody, even a Clear, will get some little reaction. Got that? So then you know the E-Meter is reading. And then you ask him to mock some things up and keep them from going away. And ask him if he did it. And, of course, if you say, "Did you do it?" and he says, "Yes," but he didn't, he'll get a reaction, and then you know what the score is.

Mm-hm.

So that is one of the hotter tests, because it's quite objective. It shows up on an E-Meter. You see that?

Male voice: Well, I got a good certainty that I was making those things from not going away, holding still and makingand I got a resistance to making them solid, and it was a lot of fun.

And the other one is, does he seem to you to be in good shape? That'squite important. That doesn't outweigh the other tests but it certainlyaccompanies them. Does he seem to you to be in good shape?_

Yeah.

There is yet another test: Is he positive in his replies? The old comm test. Communication lag test. Are his replies sequitur? Is he definite?

Male voice: Found afterwards they dropped off the bottom of the E-Meter, but I still had a lot of fun.

I'll give you a test for aberration the like of which you never saw before. I mean, this is a wonderful test for aberration. You all know all about it already. But I can usually spot a state of case without looking at any pictures or bank. I'll say something to somebody, and he will give me a scientist-type reply, which always begins with, "Well, I don't know, but. . ." The divine right of being doubtful, which is very much overexercised by the boys in the physical sciences and so forth. They think there is some virtue in being doubtful.

I'm sure, I'm sure. That's all right. I'm not even going to comment on that.

You say, "Well, could this be done?" You ask them, "Could it be done," whatever it is, you know?

Male voice: Okay. That's the answer.

And they say — well, they don't know, but. . . Now, they may not use those words, but they'll use that attitude.

Second male voice: You mock up an object as itself. The object that's being mocked up is null.

You read some of these scientific papers and they're 50 percent on yes and 50 percent on no. And they go wobble-wobble-wobble-wobble, in conclusion, in conclusion, in conclusion, flub — is the meter on which they scan.

Right.

You'll find somebody who can really do something, does not write such a paper. But it drives university chairs and other people utterly stark, staring mad to read a positive paper. They cannot stand positiveness. They'll be very critical if they're given something positive. Somebody says, "In conclusion, the square root of the cube law is blank, blank, blank. Signed, Q.E.D." so on. You'll see some chair of mathematics or physics or something, ordinary guy that they get in there, just go zzzzzzzzdow.

Second male voice: Then I move in close proximity to the body and it discharges like mad.

I had one tell me one time, " I tried to read your book, Dianetics: Modern Science of Mental Health."

Well, what do you think would happen?

I said, "Couldn't you manage it?"

Second male voice: Well, as it discharges . . .

"No! You kept making conclusions, conclusions, conclusions!"

What are you reading? What are you reading? What's the E-Meter read?

And I said, "Yes," I said, "that was interesting, wasn't it? Conclusions."

Second male voice: Body resistance.

He says, "But there are no conclusions in the field of the mind! You know that!"

Ah.

Wonderful fellow.

Second male voice: The density of. . .

Now, you ask somebody who just finished an intensive. This is one of the ways I spot it, see. You ask him — he's just finished an intensive, he was brand-new, he came in and he got an intensive, and you ask him, you say, "How did you get along?"

Yeah, and don't you suppose that a mock-up can alter that?

And he says, "Well. . ."

Second male voice: If a mock-up is there, makes a difference to it as opposed to being there.

I could say at that point, "Another week." See? I'd just say, "Another week." You know? And I'd be right. But because they're supposed to have the right of saying things, and saying their say at this time, why, I let them go on talking. And, of course, it always patterns off of this: "Well. . ." Doubt, doubt, "maybe," "perhaps," qualification, qualified, "but. . ." And when they get these sentences all strung out, there were no periods in them but plenty of doubts. You see that?

Well?

You say, "Did your auditor do a good job?"

Second male voice: I don't quite understand this.

"Well. .." blah, blah, blah, blah.

You don't?

If the fellow is in pretty good condition, he's already — now get this carefully — made up his mind about it. In other words, he has a conclusion. He habitually makes conclusions. He has opinions and he can express his viewpoints.

Second male voice: No.

Now, you'd be in pretty wonderful condition if you were audited for a whole week by somebody and you decide at the end of that time that he was, "Well, I don't know." See, the guy was fair or the guy tried or the guy was very good or he stunk. You see, there's a variance. But the expression of the variance would be positive. A person who can postulate seldom says "maybe." So this is an indirect test of the ability to postulate.

Did you ever run Matched Terminals?

Now, the only time a person who can postulate goes out into long strings of "maybe" is when he doesn't have enough data. And he will put something on wait until he gets data. So his questions then, if you're able to furnish him the data, will sort out data. And you have an immediate test the moment you ask somebody something about his case or about something else.

Second male voice: Yes.

Now, you can ask somebody at the beginning of an intensive, somebody who's in pretty good shape, "Well, how do you think you will make out?"

Did you ever see the discharge between these terminals?

He will tell you, of course, the only rational, sensible thing, "Well, I'll wait and see." See? That's the only sensible thing he could say.

Second male voice: Yes.

He could say, "Well, I'll predict that I have a good intensive and postulate it and make sure." But you probably talk about an OT, and he wouldn't need any processing.

Well, don't you suppose there's some little discharge between the mock-up and the body or something of this sort going on?

So people who are about to be processed, or people who have just been processed, respond to some degree, positively. If they have any reservation, it is a reservation for lack of data. If their statements are dragged out or conditional, it is on the basis of lack of data.

Second male voice: Yes, I realize that, but I don't see what polarity a mock-up has in relation to a body that will make a discharge.

Now, I'm not trying to hang anything around your neck. Act any way you please. I'm giving you some tests for Clear.

You're going to have to find this out, too. I'm not being very informative today, am I?

His statements are, to a marked degree, conclusive — merely demonstrating to you that he has concluded. When we were asking a chap the other day on an interview at the HGC, the interviewer, who was not Clear, was asking this person about this, and there was only one thing impressed the interviewer. And that was that the fellow had an answer for every question which was quite positive. And he'd never seen this fellow positive before, and this was what overwhelmed the interviewer. Even though the fellow didn't know, he certainly said so. See, if he had not reached a conclusion, he said that, too. But the interviewer had known this person earlier and this person had always prefaced everything with, "Well, I don't know . . ." and then had qualified, qualified, qualified and gone on to the end of the conversation with nothing but qualifications, and no standpoint or viewpoint of any kind in between. You got that?

Male voice: This is a general one. In regard to auditing on the outside, preclears who come to you, we have this procedure worked out now. It's sort of a whole-hog deal. You start out and you work toward Clear, and the end goal is Clear. Now the question is, suppose the guy just comes for a week and that's all he hadall the vacation he has or something. . .

So that is a little sort of eyesight, ear to the ground sort of — ear to the chest sort of test for Clear. Look at the ability of the individual to be positive or to be concisive. Even though he doesn't know, there is no reason for him to comm lag.

I'm so glad you are asking this question.

Of course, he tries to remember something, that is something else. That's not a comm lag. It's just — you say, "Well, did you feel better than this before?" or "Have you ever felt any better than this?" Something like that.

Male voice: And you get him maybe three quarters of the way or...

He says, "Well. . . (pause) yeah, when I was a kid I probably felt better than this a time or two."

You are so right in asking me this question.

Well now, why did you get a comm lag?

Male voice: Is there a liability to this or...

Well, you're asking him for a new chain of rationale. You're asking him for a new chain of thinkingness. And he sometimes has a little difficulty shifting his gears, getting over into another pattern.

This is a nice question, and one that I intended to cover in a lecture and so forth, and so far I hadn't put my finger on it, and we hadn't had it. And I'll give you the dope right now. This is the subject of a considerable amount of research: whether or not you should run your Clear Procedure whole-hog, straight out, against a pc that came in to get his hangnails cleared up, see, or a pc that just came in — whether or not that you should run this. We can do so many things; we have so many processes.

If he were in terrifically good condition he, of course, would have no difficulty at all. But you're not going to hold this against him. Particularly after somebody's been processed. Because his whole bank and habits of thinking have been completely shaken up, and he is not now accustomed to thinking this way. And he has to become refamiliar with the whole thing. You get the idea? But he'll know this.

Now, we dropped back, by the way, to SCS and Connectedness suddenly and abruptly from CCHs, for one reason only: CCH belongs below the point where we are getting most of our pcs. It's way downstairs. Furthermore, run on a person in fairly good shape, it gives a variable result.

Now, these various tests are quite interesting. I have not said a blessed thing about psychosomatic illness. Is he still psychosomatically ill?

Say the auditor feels good one day and CCH works, and he doesn't feel good the next day and it doesn't work. Got it? So we drop back with a thud, back to one we knew worked whether or not the auditor was doped off or — what he was doing — he could still get a good gain, results and positive control by dropping back to this one for which we had, actually, hundreds of case histories done in the HGC. And we found out everybody found it was very successful, and everybody could use it. So here was a case of compromising with the reality that other people could use this. All right.

Well, how are we to determine whether an illness is psychosomatic or not?

That was one burning question that got answered in this thing. We laid aside better processes, mind you, in order to pick up a constancy of gain. All right.

Psychosomatic illness turns out to be (just amongst us girls, here) no test for Clear because it might not have been psychosomatic. You understand this? Well, a fellow has got four tendons cut. "Well, oh yeah, yeah," you say. "Oh yes." Now, they didn't heal up, and he's in excellent condition, then we have to conclude that they were not psychosomatic but physical. Get that? We merely conclude that he is weak in the universe of bodies. But that's nothing against him. That's nothing against him. He very well might patch these up in the next six months. See? This requires some looking at it, some settling out and so on.

Now, it's with a sigh that we have to do the same thing, if we are really auditing a preclear, to get the best gain. Because if we are really going flat out to produce the highest possible gain in the number of hours we have to process him, we will use Intensive Procedure, and unfortunately just forgo the pleasures of tremendous numbers of processes that were lots of fun to run. Because test after test has demonstrated this horrible fact: that a preclear run only a third of a way to Clear on this Intensive Procedure as you are doing it, makes a higher profile gain, makes a higher IQ gain, and gets more psychosomatic change than one run on any other process we know about, except a fluky process called Rising Scale which actually belongs above the point.

Of course, we did have somebody with a withered arm one time. And this person had been moping around and moping around with a withered arm. And some auditor audited this person. You know, we've always been getting in the last seven years, we've been getting fantastic results. Just because we're doing something new is no reason why we were all tramps yesterday, you know? And this fellow was going around with a withered arm, and he was moping and doping and so on, about this. It seemed to be about all he could talk about and so on. And some auditor got real mad about it and grabbed him.

Now, the auditor can change the preclear's postulates in Rising Scale, and so alter him all over the place, even though the preclear can't postulate. And we can do all sorts of weird things with Rising Scale Processes. We have neglected them. We have neglected them. We got interested in mass phenomena and so on. But Rising Scale is run on the buttons of the Chart of Attitudes — are really a wild one. Sometimes we don't do anything with it, sometimes we shoot the moon with it. It's always one to keep in mind.

This auditor, by the way, had a good reason to be cocky. He had about a four- or five-year-old boy who had two withered arms, very short. And this auditor had gone down and processed this little boy, just on the miracle basis, you know? And he only processed this little kid for a few hours, and all of a sudden the little kid's arms grew out to proper length. Case is lying up there in the file. Anyway.

Rising Scale is something an auditor can tailor-make. He can say, "Get the idea you're sick. Can you do that?"

The auditor got mad about this withered-arm deal and, himself, ran the body. Got this? This is different. This was "no-cognition-Pete," the preclear, you see? No idea had ever turned up in any process, you see. And the auditor just mauled this guy around, you know, and the fellow's arm grew two inches, and at last observation seemed to be recovering.

And the fellow says, "Yes."

The preclear, however, was very surprised and went much deeper into apathy. The auditor could much more ably face a preclear's body and handle it and do things with it, than the preclear. So, that somebody's psychosomatic became well is no test of Clear, either.

"Get the idea you're well. Did you do that?"

Because more and more auditors are going to be Clears. And they will find themselves more and more able to confront bodies and do things with them. So just that a body got well is no test of a Clear at all.

"No," the fellow says, "I could only get the idea I was not quite so sick." And you gradually work him up to the idea of where he can tolerate the postulate. And you're doing postulate erasures. And you can actually change a case around without changing his case level, with Rising Scale. So this, then, becomes highly admissible as a process for patch-ups, assists or anything else, but doesn't become admissible on an intensive if you're really going to do most for the preclear.

That it remained caved in is no test of Clear — not necessarily. Because it might be physiological on some kind of a basis or another. The fellow actually might have a tumor as big as his brain. You get the idea? We can only say now that he will attempt to do something about the condition. That's all we can say about it. But that he doesn't at once do something about the condition is not an invalidation. Do you see that? Over a span of time with a Clear you will see the condition change.

Therefore, time after time after time, now, I have practically beaten an auditor — who knew very well that something else was the best thing to run — into running control of the preclear, graduated at once into mock-ups: Keep It from Going Away, Hold It Still, Make It More Solid. Even though the preclear was just having the awfulest time — a foggy field, flubbing, unable to do it, failures, having to be coached carefully — guys that were way down below the bottom rung. And we still made more profile gain and more IQ gain.

But "Clear" is a definition of a thetan. And "psychosomatic" is a description of a body. So we do not confuse a mental condition or a thetan condition — well, let's be very positive, let's not confuse a thetan condition even with a mental condition. Nor a thetan condition with a body condition. It is not fitting to say, "She is beautiful, therefore she is Clear." Well, "She is beautiful," what do you mean? She has a beautiful body, maybe. See? She has a beautiful body, then this is no index, because I've seen some "operating GEs" in my time! They're just about as much alive as a mannequin in a store window. We've seen some of them and I'm sure you have — wide-open cases. Wow! Bank total effect on thetan. "Operating GEs," we call them.

And it doesn't much matter whether we finish it up or not. There's some kind of a halfway point. I don't know where the point is, exactly, but after he passes this point, he will continue to get clearer and clearer and clearer. And may even, after six or eight months, get Clear when you only ran him for about twenty-five hours on this Intensive Procedure that you're using, which is quite remarkable. You get him up to a certain level, then.

Now, whenever we have an observation or a test for Clear, let us make sure that it is a test of a thetan. Tsk. Got it? And the one thing that we say he must be able to handle is a mind. Now, let's not stretch it any further than that, shall we?

Now I wanted — I'm very glad you asked that question because you don't have to clear him to get there. You know, you really are not clearing him, anyhow. Clearing is a bystop on the road toward OT. And you know you have to process toward OT to get him to Clear. You didn't even go toward Clear.

If a thetan is in good condition, he can certainly handle a mind. If his tolerance of mass is high, then he can handle mental tolerances. Now, that's what you're demanding of him. If he can ably handle mental tolerances, as his own familiarity in the field of livingness increases, he will eventually be able to confront, handle, do things with the body. And as his livingness increases, his familiarity and so on, he will eventually come around and handle the fourth universe.

We have a whole series of processes that process directly at Clear that don't get there. In other words you, in this case, have to go to San Francisco to get to Omaha. See, then he never runs into the arrival idea. You may be having a little difficulty in this Unit right here at this time with one or two cases who are trying to arrive at Clear. Well, just have them skip it entirely, get it out of the road and have them try to arrive at OT.

But you cannot lay down — that I can find out — you could not lay down any specifications as to what he should be able to do with a body or specifications of what he should be able to do with the physical universe. Unless you started classifying OTs. Now, this is what you saddle an OT with. See, he, for sure, is able to confront bodies and do things with them. And he certainly can confront the mest universe.

That's a very interesting question you asked there, thank you.

A familiarity with his own body, just so that he's not scared to death of it, a familiarity with an auditing room just so he's not flinching and going — doing a bunk past Arcturus every time he notices that he's being in session, is about all you could ask of somebody.

Male voice: Thank you.

So these, then, are not — basically, let's be frank, just because they can't be defined these are basically not, then, part of any test for Clear. The body, the physical universe: no test for Clear. Thetan, mind — these are tests for Clear.

Second male voice: If you're running a preclear on mock-up processes, do you think it would be advisable to findif the preclear is doing the process very easily, you know, can get good mock-ups and everythingdo you think it would be advisable to find something that gives him a bit of difficulty so that both you and the preclear can work together?

He has no reactive bank. What is a reactive bank? A reactive bank is evidently that hidden automaticity which apparently stores and gives up facsimiles without choice by the preclear. That's evidently a reactive bank. It is the automatic "furnish you with facsimiles of all shapes, sizes and kinds even when you were asleep" sort of mechanism. You got it? See, that's a reactive bank. A Clear does not any longer have a reactive mind unless he puts one there.

No.

Now, obviously he's come up to an ability to remember without masses. Let's go right back to masses again. He doesn't have to help himself and his memory by furnishing himself with a mass in order to know about it. See? So you've come back to the ability to make postulates. Well, of course, he can always put it there, but there is no reason for him to do so.

Second male voice: No?

There's a little trick that you yourself can pull, you know, long before you get Clear. You say, "What was his name? What was his name? What was his name? What was his name? What was his name?" It's not going to do you any good at all to sit there and chant this.

No. The gain you are looking for is an improvement in his ability to handle what he can handle. And any attempt to go into significant activities has now been pretty well damped out and proven. By the way, this is quite new; this is only in the last ten days that a definite decision has been made in this.

Because the more you talk and think about it the more mass you as-is and the less likely you are to remember. You'll get the phenomenon of taking your mind off the subject and then remembering a couple of hours later. That's when enough mass has developed to give you the hot dope on an automaticity.

Second male voice: I didn't mean significances. I mean if above a certain . . .

Well, there's a way to short-circuit this and directly route it. You can route it at once merely by mocking him up — it's an interesting test. "What was his name? What was his name?" Don't go on chanting, "What was his name?" Mock him up. Mock him up. Mock him up. Mock him up. Mock him up. And you finally say, "Hello, Joe."

You said "difficulties."

Your consideration, evidently, is that you have to have the mass before you have the dope. We could say, then, that dialectic materialism, which says from two forces you get ideas and so forth — they're so low on the scale they don't even mention masses. The only masses they can think of are masses of people. But "from two forces you get ideas." See? There's a little clue about this. That's simply the idea that an individual has to have the thing before he knows the thing. He can't get the thing conceptually.

Second male voice: Yes.

Think of the state that Nikola Tesla must have been in. Think of this guy in terms of Clear: He set up in his mind the alternating-current motor and let it run for a year or two to see what parts wore out. That was the way Nikola Tesla invented the AC motor.

And the way you get difficulties is significances.

Well, now, to have that much mass around undisturbed and never pull at it or get interchanges with anything else because of it, man, could that guy tolerate mass! And motion. See? Here was probably the greatest electrical genius of the age, the last — I mean we talk of James Watt and Faraday and a lot of these guys. They were probably very, very great guys. There's no doubt about that. But here was a guy, Nikola Tesla, who nobody's been able to figure out yet. For instance, he talks about currents running along the ground — the "ground wave." And if you go around the electrical or engineering department of any university, they will give you a bunch of this, "Well, I don't know. Nothing has been written about it." It's one of the most gorgeous things you ever saw.

Second male voice: All right. Check, check.

Nikola Tesla was an example of somebody being able to think in high gear. But unfortunately, he could think in such high gear that he never bothered to go into agreement with somebody thinking in low gear, and so he's not taught in a university today worth a nickel. Get the idea?

Got it?

You try to explain Scientology to somebody who has not yet found out that people think, and you're in trouble. See? Case is going in high gear.

Yes?

Now, you can overwhump them, just overwhelm them, and go ahead and get the job done and bring them out at the other end, which is one of the more remarkable things that we can do today.

Male voice: The question of reading nulls, you ask the preclear to mock something up and keep it from going away and the needle starts to slow or iscontinues to slowly swing up.

But there are definite tests for Clear. They cannot be faked. It's too much of a strain for a person who is not, to fake them. And it's almost impossible for a Clear not to do them. He probably couldn't fake them, either.

Correct.

Now, a Clear can make an E-Meter wobble around, pretty much at will. So just don't let him look at the needle while you're testing him. All right.

Male voice: He then says, "Yes." The needle at that point may or may not jump off after he said yes. But you say to him, "Did you keep it from going away?" He says, "Yes," and the needle kicks, rapidly comes back. You say, "Thank you" and the needle kicks. In other words, apart from the fact. . .

Now, do you see what the background tests of this are? Basically a Clear is someone who does not have a reactive mind and so therefore does not have reactive actions. And there are definite tests by which this can be determined. So it is not really a. relative state — not by our own definition. There are certain things that do denote whether or not the fellow got off at that station. Got it?

I'd certainly research this preclear like mad.

Okay. Thank you.

Male voice: Yeah, well now . . .

Do you know why I would? You're picking this up out of the lie phenomena I mentioned in the lecture, aren't you?

Male voice: That's right. But we have already hit this confusion. Do you call that a null or don't you?

No, that is not a null, definitely.

Second male voice: How long do you persist on clearing the field until you go on to the other?

You can persist too long, that's for sure.

Second male voice: You keep beating the thing and beating the thing and...

You can certainly go too far. Yes, you can certainly go too far. I think — I'm trying to work out a better one for this. You've got — the only difficulties anybody's having is with fields and so on. And the better one that I've — in testing conditionally, not necessarily a better one — is to clear it up to a point where he can get mock-ups and actually see them and recognize them and handle them, you see — just clear it up that far. And then do this, handle them you know, and keep them from going away, and hold them still, and make them more solid and so forth, for a while. And then maybe crack at the field again, see? And then go into clearing the field some more. And that's the one that's being tested at this moment. That's the best answer I can give you.

Second male voice: Thank you.

You bet.

Yes, madam?

Female voice: I have a field behind the body where I keep pictures hidden from myself.

All right.

Female voice: Now, is it going to be quicker to clear up this field or simply run Creative Processing and get to OT?

Run what?

Female voice: Creative Processing. Just, you know, mock it up and keep it from going away . . .

It'll clean up. You see, both things clean up a field. Mocking up a chunk of field and pushing it into the body is actually no real difference from mocking up something and keeping it from going away.

Female voice: Yeah.

It's just another method of keeping it from going away, don't you see?

Female voice: Yeah. Well, then you think it'll be a shorter route simply to run the mock-up and keep it from going away than it would be to mess around with the field?

You can see it in front, can't you?

Female voice: Certainly.

Above?

Female voice: Yeah.

Below, to the right and left, and you just can't see it in back?

Female voice: I can see it in back; I just have a field back there.

Oh, so what? One of these fine days, why, you'll mock up a woman or something or other, and it's just null all the way around, and all of a sudden the sky will cave in. That I can tell you, for sure. Because all that field is doing is restraining a visibility on some type of mock-up. It'll cave in eventually, whether you do anything about it or not.

Female voice: Well, it's all right with me.

Sure. The monitoring factor here is what's the shortest route?

Female voice: Well, that's what I say.

I haven't found, really, what is the shortest route, but any route we've approached so far has been successful. And, very discouraging, on several tests that were made, we got answers in favor of clearing the field, and answers in favor of simply keeping mock-ups from going away, see? Wow.

Yes?

Male voice: Where would you classify Viewpoint and Consideration Straightwire on the gradient scale of processing?

Well, it's pretty low. It'll run on processes way downstairs. But here the auditor has a tremendous influence upon the bank. It really doesn't return to the preclear as much determinism as it should, but it is giving him a familiarity.

Male voice: Classified low.

Yeah, low. Yeah.

Male voice: Mm-hm. Fine.

Second male voice: In Creative Processing we do the six sides from the body. Why do we neglect the space of the body itself?

Well now, just a moment. Who told you "from the body"?

Second male voice: In front of the body.

Yeah, in front of the body, go on. You do six sides. In front of the body . . .

Second male voice: To the right side of the body . . .

Right.

Second male voice:... to the left, back, up and down.

Right.

Second male voice: From the body.

What's your question?

Second male voice: This leaves a space between those various areas. I'm kind of curious about getting in there and doing some work.

Audience: (various responses)

Second male voice: From my body I mock up to the front, to the rear.

That's what you said, from your body.

Second male voice: Right.

Why?

Second male voice: Because that's the space in front of my body.

Yeah, but why are you doing it from your body?

Second male voice: No, that's where I'm putting them.

Yeah.

Second male voice: I'm not doing it from any particular location.

Yeah.

Second male voice: My question is that afterwe're working in a space . . .

Right.

Second male voice:. . . which encloses this body.

Yeah.

Second male voice: Why do we neglect that space? Why don't we put mock-ups in there too?

Audience: Why don't we put one there? That's right.

Yeah, but how far in front of that body?

Second male voice: Right at it, on the surface of it.

Well, you don't have to. You can put it eight miles out there, if you want to.

Second male voice: Right. And I can go on out for quite a distance.

As far as the neglecting of the space is concerned, you will find out that space is created . . .

Second male voice: Yeah.

. . . with a familiarity. A guy gradually takes over the space and begins to create it. And so far, an overt attempt to get spatial about the body, or actually construct space or handle space so that we can do something with the space, have all met with retardations. They are — that is a longer route. We found out it happens anyway.

All right, you say, "Now, why don't we just jump in and handle the space so he doesn't have space trouble, and then sail on from there?" Well now, it's been attempted, and it's only the research tests that were made on this that tell us. I mean, there isn't any other reason why — there is no real reason why we can't do this, don't you see, beyond this fact, and that is that tests made on it showed it to be a longer and more abstruse route.

Yes?

Second male voice: My point is that if the command should be changed to "in front of the center point of that body," then you would be using all of the space available. Because it's a no-dimension point in the center, you'll be doing mock-ups in all directions from a point, rather than from a body. No?

No. Might have some virtue, but. . .

Second male voice: I know some mock-ups do infringe on the body's space.

Oh, but for sure.

Second male voice: But. . .

Of course, that's what you're trying to do.

Second male voice: Guess so.

Right.

Second male voice: . . . figured any significance . . .

Right. Right. You do infringe on the body's space, until you can do so with complete aplomb. Of course, every thetan is invading the privacy of a body. And his difficulty with interpersonal relations is because he will not invade the privacy of other bodies. So obviously, we have him unwilling to do much about the body's space, unwilling to do much about other bodies' spaces, and it comes about in the field of familiarity. It's a gradient scale of familiarity that he runs into. As you put up a mock-up you, of course, have some space. Does that answer it in any way?

Second male voice: Yeah, it does.

All right.

Yes?

Female voice: I was trying to put my mock-ups in agreed-upon time, and I wonder if you're running into that with pcs. Might end up the agreed-upon time would be a component of exteriorization or something. In other words, I was trying to have the mock-up here and now with my eyes shut, you know? "Why aren't the walls there?" I'd say. Well. . .

Nobody asked you to do that.

Female voice: Nobody asked me to, I know.

That's right.

Female voice: That'sI promptly . . .

Her auditor had better notice this.

Female voice: Well, I must have decided that in some old auditing session.

Yeah. Well, it's just — it's just something more.

Female voice: Uh-huh.

We had a pc that was showing no gain, no gain, no gain, and all of a sudden went boom on one of these fields.

Female voice: I'm not sure what I said was true.

Yeah, I know, but I just — let me tell you this story. And this was HGC last week. All of a sudden, big field, big field you know, but pc was picking up objects, null objects, null objects, null objects. And all of a sudden this whole field went crashthud, boom. He was picking up items in a room in France in the sixteenth century, carefully picking up item after item in that room. And of course, as he kept these from going away, he eventually built it up to a point of where he kept the whole room from going away, and the whole field blew — thud! You see that? So if a person concentrated on putting them all in present time, you might have a tendency not to blow the existing field. See that? That could be a slowdown, simply by an arbitrary interposition of a new idea.

Second female voice: Last year I was doing the Then and Now Solids and I was able to get very brilliant 3-D pictures.

Right.

Second female voice: Now I have a black field. But I just have a feeling that there — / know there are facsimiles there, sort of sneaking up on me. But I'm still working on clearing my field. I have a feeling that I can get mock-ups.

But nobody's asked you to?

Second female voice: No.

Well. . .

Second female voice: I was just wondering whether I should . . .

It probably needs that to be done at the moment, and the only sin that could be done is not to ask you sooner or later — sooner, preferably — if you can get a mock-up.

Second female voice: Well I have very little certainty about it now, whether I can get a mock-up.

You'll find out that many times a bank is very bright, and then turns black, and then goes gray, and odd things happen. A person who has brilliant mock-ups can very easily and suddenly find himself with a totally black field. And the process that turned it black, if run a little bit further, turns it on bright again. And you probably have hit some sort of an interim thing.

That's all the time we have anything for. Does that answer your question in any way?

Second female voice: Mm-hm.

All right. Thank you very much.