Now, “willing to talk to the auditor” is the other one. Now of course, a pc with a heavy ARC break1 is not willing to talk to the auditor, but also a pc who does not want the auditor to know something is unwilling to talk to the auditor. But when a pc has a […]
attention
HCOB: Group Auditing
Group Auditing is as effective as we can continue control over the group. As therapeutic as the control can be bettered. Control can be of attention, person (body) and thinkingness. Should any of these break down, auditing value stops. Hubbard, L. R. (1957, 8 April). Group Auditing. (Hubbard Communications Office Bulletin). The Technical Bulletins of […]
Lecture: Aberration and the Sixth Dynamic (3)
But death itself becomes an unwanted, a very painful and an extremely difficult mechanism. But it was once a therapeutic mechanism. It was once one way to get out of the game you were tired of playing, and one could do it rather easily; he could do it at any time. It is today no […]
Lecture: Process To Resolve Randomity And Automaticity (continued) (2)
You can take anybody who’s in real bad shape and you’ve got what is known as Distraction Processing. If you really want to fix them up and make them let go of the whole bank… I’m sure psychiatrists would love this technique. And if it weren’t for the fact that they were – they were […]
Lecture: Spacation, Anchor Points and Attention
Now, ridges are points where attention is too fixed. There are too many anchor points per unit of space if the ridge is a painful or unwanted ridge. So, what do you do? You just got too many anchor points in the same unit of space… Now, let’s take where we have no attention; I […]
Lecture: Randomity, Control and Prediction, Part 1
The circuit case asks you consistently and continually, “Why did God make this universe? What was the cause of this universe? Why was it made?” Well, we’re coming close enough to it when we say cause and effect and attention. Why? Because these things are observable, terrifically observable. Does there have to be a reason […]