Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex HCO BULLETIN OF 7 MAY 1969 ISSUE VI | Saint Hill Manor, East Grinstead, Sussex HCO BULLETIN OF 7 MAY 1969 Issue V (Revision of HCO Bulletin of 21 October 1968. For use on Dianetic Course only.) |
FLOATING NEEDLE | |
A Floating Needle is the idle uninfluenced movement of the needle on the dial without any patterns or reactions in it. It can be as small as 1 “ or as large as dial wide. It does not fall or drop to the right of the dial. It moves to the left at the same speed as it moves to the right. It is observed on a Mark V E-Meter calibrated with the TA between 2.0 and 3.0 with GIs in on the pc. It can occur after a cognition blowdown of the TA or just moves into floating. The pc may or may not voice the cognition. | |
It, by the nature of the E-Meter reading below the awareness of the thetan, occurs just before the pc is aware of it. So to give a “That’s it” on the occurrence of the F/N can prevent the pc from getting the cognition. | |
SUMMARY OF HOW TO WRITE AN AUDITOR’S REPORT, WORKSHEETS AND SUMMARY REPORT, WITH SOME ADDITIONAL INFORMATION | Pcs and pre-OTs OFTEN signal an F/N with a “POP” to the left and the needle can actually even describe a pattern much like a Rock Slam. Meters with lighter movement do “pop” to the left and R/S wildly for a moment. |
AUDITOR’S REPORT | One does not sit and study and be sure of an “F/N”. It swings or pops, he lets the pc cognite and then indicates the F/N to the pc preventing overrun. |
An Auditor’s Report should contain: | A one hand electrode sometimes obscures an F/N and gives false TA. If used, use higher sensitivity and get the TA from 2 cans when needed. |
| Founder |
WORK SHEETS | |
A Work Sheet is supposed to be the complete running record of the session from beginning to end. The Auditor should not be skipping from one page to another but should just be writing page after page as the session goes along. | |
A Work Sheet is always foolscap, 8 x 13 inches, written on both sides and each page is numbered. Pc’s name is written on each separate sheet. | |
A Work Sheet may be in 2 columns depending on how big the writing is of the Auditor. | |
When the session is completed, the Work Sheets are put in proper sequence and stapled with the Auditor’s Report Form on top from beginning to end of session. | |
TA and time notations should be made at regular intervals throughout the session. | |
When making a list on a Pc: | |
1. Always mark a read as it reads – F. LF. BD. | |
2. Always circle the reading item. Mark if indicated to the Pc with IND. | |
3. Always when extending a list put in a line from where it has been extended, e.g. | |
Joe | |
Shoes | |
Socks | |
___________________ extended | |
Sky | |
Wax | |
Pigs, etc., etc. |
NOTE: When you repair an old auditing session you always write on the old auditing report and W/sheets in a different coloured pen with the date of the-report.
When running various processes in a session, mark each F/N clearly noting time and TA.
A Summary Report is written exactly as per HCOB 17 March 1969, “Summary Report”.
Two gross goofs I have noticed since case supervising folders on the RSM is that Auditors have not been turning in Ethics cases to the MAA. In one instance, a Pc was audited by 2 auditors in 2 different sessions, got a R/S on crimes against Scientologists and M/W/Hs and neither auditor turned the Pc in to Ethics. This is not the only instance. The second thing is that Auditors are very evaluative of the Pc’s case as indicated by their comments on the Summary Report. This is incorrect; this report is used simply as an exact record of what happened during the session. It is not up to the auditor to evaluate the Pc’s Case, this is the Case Supervisor’s job. The auditor may suggest what is to be run, at which time the Case Supervisor will review the session, what was run, how the Pc went in relation to what was being run and then give his directions.
Auditor Report Forms or W/sheets are never recopied. The Auditor should always read over his W/sheets before turning in folder to the Case Supervisor and, if any words or letters are missing or cannot be read, they should be written in with a different coloured pen.
If these rules are followed it will make the Case Supervisor’s job much much easier and auditors’ reports more valuable.
To add the obvious, it is a crime to give any session or assist without making an Auditor’s Report or to copy the original actual report after the session and submit a copy instead of the real report. Assist reports that use only contact or touch assists may be written after a session and sent to Qual.