R2H ASSESSMENT A Lecture given on 8 August 1963

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R2H ASSESSMENT A Lecture given on 8 August 1963

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R2H ASSESSMENT

A Lecture given on
8 August 1963

Thank you.

This is the what?

Audience: 8th of August.

The 8th of August, A.D. 13.

The figure 8 is a symbol of money. Actually, its original derivation was two moneybags, one
sitting on the other. And when Pythagoras came back, why, he gave us this datum and here
we are in Greece, at the apex of the newest and the best: numerology.

Oh, it's the wrong lecture hall!

You have to laugh when you consider what man has considered knowledge to be at periods in
the past.

All right. Here we are, Saint Hill Special Briefing Course. And today I have some good news
for you, and this is the evolution of List One for R2H. I'm going to show you how you can
evolve a List One. No matter if you have landed in the middle of Pago Pago, or something of
the sort, and you don't have a textbook to your name, you can evolve List One.

Now, this has really taken some doing. I don't mean to exaggerate. It'd be impossible to
exaggerate the difficulties which have been connected with this. R2H is a process with a new
rationale. There's a new rationale connected with that process. This actually is the Level 2
process, Case Level 2. And R2H really goes into both channels, but isn't just headed at OT;
this gives you your Clear way-stop. Because you can move up this process, and sooner or
later you're going to start seeing free needles. And that kind of phenomena is very likely to
occur in running this particular process. Not necessarily with every case. Some cases are
going to run so head-on into a GPM that you're going to have to shift to 3N in order to carry
out that particular GPM, and then shift back to 2H. Just as you can shift from R3R over to 3N
and back again.

Well, given the fact that you could shift over to 3N, and back to R2H, you're dealing now
with a Case Level 1 process. This will boot them all the way on up the line. But if you are
dealing with just your normal course of human events and just avoid any ideas of GPMs-
don't bother with trying to clear up track in that particular direction-undoubtedly the PC
will come back off the track, and you'll start getting key-out phenomena. You see how that
process might very well, theoretically, branch?

In other words, you keep on running the process itself, you eventually make a track that looks
pretty straight and pretty clean, and gives you an apparency of Case Level 2, which is Clear,
see? And that would be with the benefit of key-out and free needle, and you probably find the
phenomena, and this is probably . . . Because you understand, this has not been done by this
process, but we have done so many of these that it's pretty easy to predict on a process line.
And you would get a phenomenon which looked very like-this is just pure R2H, see? You'd
get a phenomenon that looked very like a Case Level 2. However, it's a keyed-out Case Level
2. The person's whole track really isn't available to them. But it would give you all the
attributes of Clear, by all of its definitions.

All right. Now, if you introduce into it the factor that when you collide with a GPM you're
going to shift over into 3N, then you've got one that goes to Case Level 1. In other words,



you could take R2H, combine it with 3N when necessary, and wind up at Case Level 1. You
understand that this process has this branch, fork, in the roads.

Now, therefore, it unexpectedly joins up with what we're calling now- and you really
haven't started calling it yet-but Scientology III. Scientology III was more or less suspended
in favor of Scientology IV. The levels of Scientology: there's been a recent policy letter out
which divided Scientology up into five levels.

And there was Scientology I, that's for the public. That's your PE-level Scientology. And
we're putting out a plea to one and all to please contribute any data they think is vital and
necessary to be in this.

And then there's Scientology II, which is healing, which we haven't had too much to do with.
That's care of the body, and so forth. And HPA/HCA levels probably get quite a bit of
Scientology II.

And then there's Scientology III, and that's advanced auditing, advanced Academy courses,
that sort of thing, leading up to the area of Clear-such phenomena as we've had in the past.
Now, it doesn't happen to be a well wrapped-up area, because we jumped off of that area to
go into Scientology IV. And this occasioned even some of you quite a few headaches,
because there was a necessary speed-up in research, and the place to research toward, of
course, was OT. Now, that's Scientology IV. And the material which you're learning right
now is Scientology IV.

And then there is Scientology V. And Scientology V is the social, political, organizational
levels of Scientology. This is a takeoff from the level of OT. And that isn't just Scientology
applied to political problems. That would be a misnomer although it would read like that in a
textbook, and so forth. That isn't that at all. It's actually what does an OT do about it? That
makes quite a different subject, doesn't it?

So anyway, it is of interest to have picked up some of the earlier work at Scientology III, and
carried it forward to something of a conclusion. Now, you're not really interested in Routine
2H-and it probably ought to be redesignated. You're probably not interested in Routine 2H,
which is by the way also applicable at Scientology II, don't you see?-some other version of
it, much easier to do, something like that. You're interested as R2H applies to Scientology
IV, which is OT.

Now, I want to point out to you (and this is just a side note here) that these things fit with
classifications as they exist today. See, so you have a Class I auditor: he can listen. And you
have a Class II: well, he could probably cure something up and run repetitive processes and,
you know, CCHs, something like this, Reach and Withdraw. You have Scientology III type
auditor: well, he could make a better human being; that's the level of the better human being.
Scientology IV, Class IV auditor: you're heading for OT. And V: we're heading for a sane
universe.

So this compares with your classifications, and I think you will find that it's very neat to have
the subject organized like this. For instance, you can slap onto the covers of textbooks, one
right after the other, Scientology I: Perfectly sane issue for general public, don't you see? For
instance, we have a newspaper reporter prowling around right now, and we're feeding him
Scientology I, which of course is about all he should have anything to do with. And he
doesn't know even what he's looking at, see, right now. He thinks he came down here to
investigate our marriages. Crazy, you know?

Anyway, he's got a copy of Reg's book, and he probably looked at its title, I hope, and he'll
probably read something of that. We're getting this thing in some kind of order, however.
We're getting this thing squared away one way or the other. He's looking for sensationalism,
so we'll give him sensationalism at Level I.



Do you see? It brings a little more order to the subject. Instead of just-it's all spattered out
across these lines, why, we can subdivide it into its materials. And this only becomes possible
because we are reaching up at a high level of attainment in each one of these levels. We have
quite a bit of accomplishment in the lower levels, and we need codification's and
publications; and in republishing and codifying, and that sort of thing, we need designations.

Now, it's very baffling for you to have a process which moves on up through more than one
of these levels, which attains different things at different levels, and so on. And it is
phenomenal to have such a process at all. It moves around. It handles the thing called an
ARC break.

Well, there are many ways you could handle the thing called an ARC break. There are
probably many versions of processes which you could handle ARC breaks with. So you'll
probably see this material splintering off into these various levels. ARC, just the explanation
of what ARC is, is Level I, you see? Perhaps specific and directed ARCs at various body
parts and that sort of thing, and perhaps O/W, and that sort of thing, would constitute healing
applications of ARC. And at Clear level, of course, you're trying to raise somebody's ARC;
you can do some remarkable things with picking up their ARC breaks in this lifetime. It
would be quite phenomenal to do that.

Well, ARC has been with us for quite a while, and to push demands of ARC this high-the
theory of ARC, the triangle of affinity, reality and communication-to push that much stress
onto it and say, "All right. Let's try to push this into Scientology IV, OT," well, that's really
asking for a few blown gaskets. Because it's obvious that if this much stress is put on the
theory of ARC, then any slightest frailty in any scale is going to show up. In other words,
you're really going to have to have the stuff there.

We haven't been asking very much of this, but now we're asking everything of this. And boy,
some of our-not very much of it, fortunately, but there were some holes. There were some
holes in what we knew Of ARC. It was, you might say, insufficiently embracive or
insufficiently complete to do a totality of work.

It's all right to run a machine, let us say-you can run a machine just fine, and it gets along
fine. And then you put more load on it, you see, and it starts to heat up a little bit and its life
seems to shorten, and that sort of thing. And you put a little bit more load on it, then any bad
connection or any bit of weak metal in it is going to go spling! You see? And that's
approximately what's happened to ARC and the CDEI Scale. Now, those two things
together-those two things together-needed an overhaul. And I've been overhauling these
things empirically.

Now, R2H has only one frailty. And that is the list you use for the assessment. It's the only
frailty it has. Given an auditor who will listen, given a meter that will react, given any kind of
decent goodwill in the auditing session at all -well, the machine is pretty tolerant in those
parts. You see? R2H: it'll work just fine. I mean, you can even flub it and mess it up here and
there, and make mistakes with it, and it doesn't break down.

No, the point where it just breaks down absolutely with a crash would be a wrong assessment
list. And if that assessment list-it could have a lot of things that weren't necessary on it, but
if it lacked one single ingredient, then the bypassed charge on the case would not be located,
and you would succeed in restimulating the case at certain levels, and the case would
eventually move up to a stuck tone arm, because the charge would be wrongly placed and
encysted here and there, and the track wouldn't straighten out. You see the liability of this?

In other words, you could miss the charge on one ARC break or another ARC break without
making the case crash. That's one or another ARC break. But if one specific, very important
type of charge was missing from the list on all ARC breaks, eventually that charge would
overwhelm the PC, and you'd result in a good, high stuck tone arm and an ARC-broke PC,
and so forth.



In other words, the limit of this particular process would be the embraciveness of the list
which was used. So there is the weak point of this process: the list.

So I had to sweat and fume and fuss and fiddle and overhaul and try it again and . . . I've had
some of the fanciest systems, you know? These things would make a whole psychotherapy up
at London University, or wherever they teach the stuff here in England. They would, you
know? It'd just be marvelous. Whole new systems of interlockings and all of this kind of
thing. Beautiful. The logic in them, impeccable. See? But they didn't work. That was all that
was wrong with them. Like modern psychiatry: it's terribly convincing but doesn't work.

Now, that list with its liability of bogging a case down if an important type of charge is
missing . . . You understand that you can miss the charge on an ARC break and then get the
next one well, and then miss the real charge on the next ARC break and get the next two well,
you see, and you don't ruin anybody, you see? But if consistently that type of charge is
missing on that list, sooner or later your PC has had it, see?

So what is the totality of the list? What formula is it that makes this list a completely
embracive list? Well, you'll laugh when I eventually show you this thing, because it's always
these simple things. It seems like anybody can discover anything that's complicated. I mean,
that seems to be very easy. They go out and they discover the plutons running into the
neurons, and these fantastic chemical formulas that run on for eight pages and give you better
lipstick. It's these simple things. It's these simple things wherein lies the genius of the
situation, you see? They're the ones that you can just take and knock your head off on.

And you come back to it, what makes a good auditor an auditor? And we've eventually
broken it back to five points. And they're all fundamental points. And where you don't get
auditing done in some HGC or something like that where you're supervising auditing, you
watch it; you go back over those points and you'll find out there's one or two of them are just
madly out-not even slightly; they're just madly out. But the reduction of auditing to just five
basics is pretty wild.

Now, the breakdown of a communication cycle, and the breakdown of the auditing cycle and
that sort of thing-these things are terribly simple. But it takes some discovery like this itsa
line. I'm sure you sat there when you saw this itsa line, and you said, "Yeah. Yeah, yeah of
course, you know. Simple."

Well, frankly, when you discover these things, you feel like a complete idiot. Very self-
invalidative, you know?

It's like you've been running into this rock all the time, and you finally come back and take a
look at it; you say, "Hey, it's a rock," you know? And you've never noticed it, nobody else
has noticed it. There it's been! See? These are the discoveries that are something. And it's
this type of discovery that finally wrapped up this other list so that it just springs engrams,
you know, bang, bang, bang.

And you could put any kind of significance you ever heard of and you might still miss it on
this list, so I better give you the formula of derivation. And this is a derivation formula. I'm
going to give you the full derivation formula. I'm not going to give you any little
shorthanding of it. You, by the way, don't use this full formula in making up List One. But I
can show you a very trick system by which you could employ it without assessing forever,
see?

Now, it works like this: The CDEI Scale has an upper and a lower band. And it was on this
band that we all fell down. Now, here's your CDEI Scale: Curiosity, Desire, Enforce, Inhibit.
You're very well aware of the CDEI Scale. But that's only a piece of the scale. Now, we only
needed that piece to do everything we've been doing up to this time. And the missingness of



the remainder of the scale was not something that destroyed empires. But when we run into
something like R2H and ARC breaks if we haven't got the whole scale here, we're in trouble.

Well, what is the whole scale here? K, U-Know, or Known, and Unknown. Well, look, let's
look it over. Let's look it over. What about that Know? Well, Know is already-you had to
postulate you didn't know up above it, but that isn't unknown yet. See, the Not Know goes up
above this. The basic four postulate stuff is already in this stuff, and we don't happen to need
that because that simply measures case gain. This we do need: Known, Unknown. Why does
that fit in? How come?

It is elementary, my dear Watson. You never get curious about something you know about. I
mean, it's these damn fool, idiot things, see, that. . . So knowingness must have disintegrated,
because we know as a case progresses its knowingness rises. So as the case progresses, its
knowingness rises, and therefore we must be running out unknownnesses. And this tells us
that things have to be unknown before you enter into the CDEI Scale at all. That gets to be
very interesting.

And you'll find out s very, very interesting part of ARC breaks is the unknownness. You
know, the unknown datum-we've even got it in our early logic's. An unknown can cause a
confusion, and so forth. And there's obviously where that belongs. So that's part of your
CDEI Scale, oddly enough, which is a scale of the way one looks at things.

But that isn't the complete scale. I'm sorry to have to get into this thing any further. But
what's that? That's nothing. Nothing. That belongs on the CDEI Scale, believe it or not:
nothing. It's neither known nor unknown. There's nothing there to inhibit, enforce, desire, to
be curious about, to be unknown or to be known. There just isn't anything there. And that is
pretty obvious too, isn't it? In fact it's an idiotic obviousness. It's just an absence. That's all.
You haven't got something now to inhibit.

That's the black panther mechanism. And you feel more idiotic about this thing appearing on
this thing when you realize that it's in Book One. It's the black panther mechanism: ignore it;
do nothing about it. It's just a no-action level. It's pretty grisly. It doesn't mean no ARC.
We're not into ARC yet. This is just, well, you can inhibit things-well, how about just doing
nothing about them? Just nothing? Well, of course, that's one of these "of course"
mechanisms, because man routinely does nothing about things. That is one of his best
mechanisms. In fact, no government on earth could be the way it is if they didn't specialize in
this one. Do nothing about it until it's too late or something of the sort, which is again just
doing nothing about it.

All right. Well, that's fine, but is there anything else on this scale? Well, unfortunately this is
the one, man; this is the one that broke the camel's back. This is the one. We've talked about
it. We know it exists. We've had it around. I mean, everybody knows about it. But we know
all about it and so we've never defined it

But the basic part of this one was designating it. Finding some word that designated it that
would communicate-that would communicate. And it's F: falsify. And after you do nothing
about it, there's nothing there, you can falsify. You're not inhibiting something, you can
falsify it. You're not doing nothing about it, you're falsifying it. But of course that puts
something else there. So it tends to turn the whole scale up here again in an inversion.

See, after you've gone down this whole scale, how do you start it all over again? Well, your
K at the top, Known, becomes False. And then of course, you don't know about falseness,
and then of course you're curious about, you see, the falsifications, and so forth. And this
scale then turns round and round on that basis, but it's just the same scale now. It now hits
level after level after level after level all the way down by just running this one point. So
that's what makes the scale invert.



So it's a probability in this universe that you almost never see the K. The whole scale
probably lies below F. That part of the ARC scale, then, which most people are working with,
and so forth, are [is] below F. So you see, as you go down scale, it requires all of those
primary designations to bring about lower harmonics. You see what I mean here?
























Let me give you an example. Let me give you an example of a tremendously involved scale:
K-we'll do this very small-K, U, C, D, E, I, O, F, U, C, D, E, I, O, F, U. See this? See
what's happening here? [See Lecture Chart] See, there's your whole scale. Got it? It goes on
south. Perversions of perversions. Falsifications of falsifications. Don't you see? You finally
get modern science-you go far enough south-all based on a false premise that man is mud.
You see, something like that, and then you can go all the way, see? You get this now? Well,
that's how that thing inverts.

So, there is it. Top, K, U, C, D, E, I, O, F-Zero, F. It's not an O; it's a zero. Probably better
be spelled with a Z. And that is a complete band. And it takes each one of those levels to
make a complete band. And as long as we only had the CDEI Scale, this was very pure and
very upscale, but we couldn't deal with aberration. We couldn't deal with the raw aberration
of an engram, because we didn't have enough lower inversions, because the scale wasn't
complete, so we couldn't invert it.

There were more things in each band than we had, and the things that were missing was
Known, Unknown at the top; and down at the bottom, Zero and False. And there we have a
total cycle, you might say, of the scale. Now, again I show you, that cycle can turn over
again. Instead of Known, now, you have False, so it goes down to your unknown falseness,
you see; you're curious about falseness; the desire of falseness; the enforcement of falseness.
You see? And then you get down-the inhibition of falseness, and then no falseness, and then



you get a falseness about falseness. You see that? And you just keep on adding this up and
you will get more and more and more and more involved lower levels.

I see you're sitting there a bit stunned. Now, what don't you dig out of this? What do you see
there that you don't understand? Seemed to me to be perfectly obvious.

You're looking, by the way, at only one band-when you look at the full scale like that,
you're looking at only one band of the old Tone Scale. That's shown up: You can take
Science of Survival, the old Tone Scale of one kind or another, and let's take one band. Let's
drop down just one band. Let's go from 1.0 to 2.0. Let's just take a look at that. Let's say 2.0
to 1.0. And you're going to find all those levels between 2.0 and 1.0, and they'll be at some
harmonic or another of the upper levels, you see?

A pure scale call it the CDEI Scale just for lack of a better term at this particular time-is so
unimaginably high that it's probably never envisioned. It's terrifically high. And most of the
scales that we see, and so forth, are already with falseness at knowingness. See? It's a false,
false, a false, a false....

Look what they teach you in school. George Washington never cut down any cherry trees,
because he was an Englishman and they are orchard men, or something. You wait. You'll just
see that legend go along far enough and it will become blong, see, and it'll go down another
one, see? Very interesting.

So all truth or actions or data or almost anything else goes down this CDEI Scale in that
fashion: Known, Unknown, Curious, Desire, Enforce, Inhibit, Do Nothing, Falsify. Do you
see that now? All right.

Here we have our old friends, A, R and C. [See Lecture Chart] Nothing to this. Here you have
ARC for the incident, and here you have-that's for the incident itself (now we're getting
into R2H)-and then we have earlier incident. Got it? And we have A, R and C for the earlier
incident. We've got it for the incident we're working with, and we've got it for an earlier
incident. See? And you just do this: And each one of those levels has six. We have them for
the incident, we have them for the earlier incident. Got that? And then just for fun, in case
they didn't get the word, and so forth, on each one we put-this is for the purposes of really
getting the thing scatted into sight-we put a missed withhold. And over here, of course, it's
an earlier missed withhold.

That's your List One. Let you digest that for a minute. That's List One. Now, that's actually
all possible levels that will have any reaction on anybody about anything. That's an ARC
break laid out, man. Each one Known, Unknown, Curious, Desire, Enforce, Inhibit, Do
Nothing, Falsify each one of those levels has eight questions. Each one of those levels has
eight questions. And those eight questions are the incident attitude, communication, reality-
see, the attitude, reality, communication and a missed withhold. And then, is there an earlier
incident with a bypassed charge of the attitude, the reality and the communication and the
missed withhold, see? Put the missed withhold in there just for kicks. You'll find out it's a
bucket load of stuff.

Now, that's a full list. Now, you can add that up mathematically. There are eight questions.
Can count them up: there's one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight. There are eight
questions for each level, and there are eight levels (and that chimes in to my gag about the
figure s, beginning of the lecture), and you have eight times eight and that gives you sixty-
four questions. "And that's all the questions there is." That's a total List One-would consist
of sixty-four separate questions.

Do you see how to evolve this? I'm teaching you how to evolve it. I'm not trying to give you
a list. There's somebody sitting back there saying, "Well, he's going to give us the list in a
moment," and so on. That isn't what I'm going to teach you. I'm teaching you how to evolve
this thing. I'm assuming that you're on Pago Pago. You have collided one way or the other



with the wrong asteroid or something, and you're trying to put Scientology back together
again and run some R2H on somebody, and there you go. How do you put a List One
together? And there is your List One. Very important thing.

Sixty-four questions. I actually, at this stage of the game, don't care what you do with the
sixty-four questions, you see? It's just, there is the totality of all possible combinations of an
ARC break charge. That's all the charge there can be on an ARC break.

Now, you can dream up a whole bunch of additional ones. Oh, you can dream up additional
ones madly. I don't care if you do, maybe some of them will communicate, maybe some of
them won't. But they will actually come back to this one. And they will not be central
charges that really are bypassed charges to amount to anything.

Now, this list, this list with its sixty-four questions, gives you very interesting application
possibilities, so that you don't have to assess sixty-four questions. Well, let's assess the CDEI
Scale first on the incident, and then take the biggest rend on that, and then move that
sideways onto its eight questions. So that leaves you with a totality for assessment of eight
and eight-sixteen questions. I'm showing you there are trick systems by which you can
break this thing down.

In other words, you figure out some communicating name, see, for each one of these things.
Well, for instance, Enforce, you put "too much." Right now you're using the Inhibit Scale all
the time, all the time. An attitude refused, you see, a communication ignored: that's really
your Inhibit Scale-and an unknown this and an unknown that, and so forth. But you can say,
"Was there something known about the incident? Was something unknown about the
incident? Was [there] some curiosity about the incident? Was [there] some desire in the
incident? Was there an enforcement in the incident? Was there an inhibition in the incident?"
Or you can-Enforcement, you say "too much something in the incident?" "Was it a
nothingness that upset you in the incident?" Or "Was it something that was falsified?"

Now, one of those things bangs, and you've then got your standard scale, which of course . . .
You could put it on separate little cards, and it's written up specially worded for the level it
comes from. See? "Did that incident have an unknown attitude? Did it have an unknown
reality? Was there an unknown communication? In that incident, was that a restimulation of
an earlier unknown attitude? Restimulation of an earlier unknown reality? Restimulation of
an earlier unknown communication?" Restimulation of earlier missed withhold, of course.
The missed-withhold questions are always the same. Not "an unknown missed withhold,"
see? It's just "Was there a missed withhold?"

Now, that would be quite a remarkable system. And you'll find that system would work. That
system would work very well. But it doesn't happen to be a vital system to what you're
doing. It isn't vital that you do the system that way, because a whole bunch of these levels are
null. That's interesting. They don't have significant charge on them. And under the heading
of significant charge you can cross off K, U, C, D, E, leaving you with I. You can cross off
Zero. And F-you can leave F.

Now, if you're just going to do a short list that'll serve you in good stead, then the only thing
you're really going to leave on the list to amount to anything at all is I and F. Those are the
most pregnant sources of ARC breaks. They upset people! Which gives you a sixteen-
question list.

I'm showing you different ways by which you can handle this situation. See, I'm not giving
you that as a recommended action, I'm just giving you different ways by which you can put
together this same scale, see? You can find out . . . And that's the truth: You'll find out that
for this lifetime, certainly, I and F-they cause nearly all of your bypassed charge. It's
because of the case level you're dealing with, don't you see, and it's monitored by other
factors. That leaves you here with I and F and nothing else that's going to worry your PC, at
least in the beginning stages.



Then after a little while you're going to find your list starts falling short. There is something
going on here now. The list starts falling short and so forth. And you'll find out that you have
to add "too much": "too much attitude," see, "too much communication," "too much
reality"-"too real!" You could expand it right back on out again, and you start processing
somebody around Case Level 2, that has actually attained Case Level 2, you're going to find
yourself with a greatly fanned-out list-greatly fanned-out.

I'm just showing you there are various ways by which you can put this thing together. Now,
you can probably scratch your head and get into it and develop yourself quite a fancy system
of identifying the type of charge and assessing that particular type of charge. Only thing I'm
trying to put to you is the fact that if you've got something missing on List One, you've had
it, because that tone arm is eventually going to go up and stick.

And I don't say yet that somebody three quarters of the way up the line isn't all of a sudden
going to run into a type of charge which isn't there in his estimation. And as you go on down
the line, of course, the lower a case is, the more complex the case tends to be, and so you're
going to have to probably include "emotion" instead of just "attitude." That'd probably have
to be on your scale.

Now, the only thing that varies the scale, however-this is your basic and fundamental
scale-the only thing that varies this scale is the communication of it to the PC, this
particular PC at his particular state of case. You say, "Was there a false communication?" If
the PC is very odd indeed, very low scale or very high scale, he may only interpret this as a
lie. A lying communication, see? He immediately interprets it over. But it's good enough,
ordinarily. False communication. A false reality. A false attitude.

If you don't think false attitudes aren't in keeping, the most popular textbook on the handling
of your fellow human being is Dale Carnegie. And that's a full textbook on how to create and
maintain false attitudes and realities.

Psychology actually hasn't even come up to being able to maintain a false one. That gives
you the prevalent popularity of some things, and gives you this.

Look at the newspapers people read. You don't think there's very much true in a newspaper,
and so forth, and yet newspapers sell a lot of copies. Well, so where must they be on the ARC
scale? Where must they be? False attitudes, false realities, false communications. But how
false?

Newspaper goes even falser than false. The newspaper takes a false scientific fact and then
falsifies it. And that's why I drew you that other picture there, so you could show the
harmonics that that thing goes down on. You can get into the falsification of the falsification
of the falsification. It's like trying to handle some of these trillions-ten that you run up on
some cases.

I don't know how we're going to handle that. That's one of our big problems. PC is sitting
there trying to count the number of trillions you're saying so he knows whether or not it's the
right date, you know? You start holding your hand up, so that it's trillions-five. But look, you
only got five fingers, you need the other one for the E-Meter.

Now, there's your full scale. There's your full scale. There isn't anything more, really, that
can cause an ARC break, because this is the full lay-down of life. The communication of this
to the PC may cause you to make some ramifications of it, but you can abstract these
ramifications from this scale.

So you got a new CDEI Scale which had to be expanded for its usability. Now, that's
empirical. That doesn't necessarily fit in with anything, it's just what i9 there. What is there



that is significant to s case. And that's Known, Unknown, Curious About, Desire, Enforce,
Inhibit, Do Nothing About, and Falsify.

Now, there's some question as to whether it ought to be Zero and then F, you see, or F and
then Zero. Because you say, "Well, even a lie is some communication." I think you're
splitting hairs, because you'll find ordinarily that a falsification is worse than no
communication, ordinarily.
Now, plotting that sideways-plotting that sideways-remember that your basic scale on all
of your List Ones consists of affinity, reality and communication, and a missed withhold for
the incident. And then for earlier -not even earlier incident, just earlier-restimulation of an
earlier attitude, reality, communication, missed withhold. See, that's an earlier missed
withhold. And missed withhold would actually only have to occur-if your big scale is out, it
reduces the number of questions slightly.

Because you're simply repeating the thing if you break this down into separate cards. And
that's there because . . . And you break it down into separate cards, for God's sakes, don't
omit the missed withhold. Because this is a peculiar communication of the same thing. See,
it's a didn't communicate, you know? And also could falsify a reality, and also change an
attitude completely, don't you see? But it's a peculiar little mechanism; it's asking, in
essence, "Was there a bypassed charge?" But it speaks normally, "Was there something you
didn't say or something which you were consciously withholding?"

Now, if you went and expanded this out and out and out and out and out, you would get
yourself into trouble. If you say you're going to put a missed withhold on there, and then why
don't you put an overt? Well, you don't put an overt because it mushes engrams. You start
running O/W in the middle of an engram and you can get the PC in more energy soup than
you've gotten him in for some time. There are too many GPMs, and there's too many this,
too many that. And the effect of the bank is that if you run the eighteen buttons of a
Prepcheck, or the handful of buttons that we constitute now the big mid ruds, or even the old
little mid ruds, about and into an engram, specifically, you see, that thing will mush. It'll fold
up. And you won't have a picture. See? An overt, and the big mid ruds particularly, run
directly against an engram, can cause that engram to fold up into so much oatmeal. The
energy structure of it breaks down and it no longer is able to hold its constituents, see, and
who can tell what's in it.

So you don't do those things against engrams or secondaries. You say, "In that ARC break,
has anything been suppressed?" Well, you might get away with that one, you see? "In that
ARC break, is there anything you are careful of?" Uhhh du-du-da-da-da-ooh. "Fail to reveal"
is perfectly all right. "In that ARC break, has anything been invalidated?" Uh-uh-uh-uh-uh-
uh-uh! "In that ARC break has anything been suggested?" Oohhh! PC will be going "What's
happened?"

Because frankly, you're using 16-inch naval cannon to shoot rabbits. The buttons are just too
fundamental. They're just too powerful. I did far, far too good a job in designing the big mid
ruds and isolating those buttons. You could never say, "On the reactive mind has anything
been . . ." Apparently it takes just so much aberration to hold a picture together so you can
run it. Anyway. They go back too early, and they're too powerful.

But these, these buttons-they don't do anything to the picture but strip off and disconnect
the charge and realign the thing. And it's a very smooth operation indeed, the way this
happens.

You're essentially, in R2H, trying to make somebody's pictures better. That's what I'm
trying to call to your attention. It's all right to say, "Since the last time I audited you . . ." you
know, big mid ruds, and "in this session . . ." big mid ruds. Don't worry too much about that.
But, "On that ARC break . . ." big mid ruds, no. In other words, you can run against the
physical universe in its near-up environment. Right now you can run all the big mid ruds you
want to.



"On that plank" see, "has anything been suppressed?" This is the same thing as "Since the
last time I audited you has anything been suppressed?" Still got the whole physical universe
around you, and you're not going to get this PC to knock the physical universe apart by
running the big mid rud buttons-at this state of his case. There probably gets a point in his
processing as you get up the line where you'll no longer be able to do this safely. "In this
auditing room has anything been suppressed?" Cre-e-eak! Ghosts, see?

Now, the point I'm stressing here is that the list has another importance rather than its
significance, is we don't want the list to be too beefed up. See, the list, instead of missing
some levels, could use some buttons we know about in Scientology that would be totally
destructive of the goals of R2H. Boom! See? This guy all of a sudden is covered with white
energy, or something of the sort, and mushing engrams, and everything is getting blah, and so
on. So there are things you don't want on the list. It isn't really all right to just anything you
dream up, put on the list, see? You can go quite a ways.

I've tested out nearly all of these various variations of the thing, and they're actually not
necessary. "Was anything misunderstood?" Well, that's covered, of course, in your Unknown
level. "Was there any earlier misunderstanding?" and that sort of thing. And you know, I've
had those on lists, and I've never seen them significantly be the cause of bypassed charge.

You'd think No Communication would be terribly important. Well, it isn't terribly important
till you start walking up into engrams. The guy was in jail for a million years. What caused
the ARC break? There was no communication. Shortly after he was locked up they had a war
and he got killed-the jailer got killed, and they forgot to shut the power off and forgot to let
him out. ARC break-no communication.

You'll find that this steeps up the line. But frankly, in usual running of cases and so forth,
you'll find you won't need it.

Now, this is the woof and the warp of how you put together a List One. This is the formula by
which you put together a List One. This doesn't necessarily give you a List One that you
promptly and instantly should sit down and audit your PC with madly. There are too many
ways you can put this thing together.

Now, the preassessment of List One probably itself could be done with a shortened number of
CDEI points, see? Just take out those that ordinarily wouldn't fall, and leave about four in.
See? Leave about four in. And preassess. "Was that ARC break caused by an unknown? Was
it caused by too much of something? Was it caused by too little? Or was it caused by an
absence? Or was . . . ?" You know? Any way you want to chop it up, see? But you for sure
get False in there, and you for sure get Inhibit in there, see, because that's where those ARC
breaks live. And you start running heavy engrams, you'll find out, sooner or later you're
going to need Zero.

Also, somebody can be found holding on to a death. Now we're starting to run heavy stuff,
see? Somebody runs a death. What's wrong with this death? Why is it in restimulation all the
time? Well, he never could find out who shot him. That was the ARC break. Never could find
out who shot him. Bullet came out of nowhere. It was a beautiful day in spring, and he was
sitting on the lawn of the Ladies' Aid Society building in Des Moines, Iowa. There he sat,
and he was suddenly hit with a rocket blaster! Cause a fellow to think for quite a while.

He's liable to keep that engram in his hip pocket and look at it every once in a while,
wondering if somewhere around the edges of it he hadn't gotten a picture of who shot him.
Wrong place, wrong atmosphere, wrong mood, you see? And with an unknown in it. It's
pretty certain.

You see how you can do this? Hm? All right, what don't you understand about that scale-
why what is there? Is there anything in it that you don't understand why it's there? Hm? I see



you all frowning, but I don't see you cogniting on anything. It's just too formidable; is that
what's wrong with it? Or is it too-as I told you a little earlier-too nonsensically simple? It
kind of strickens you with its simplicity, doesn't it?

Well, I've been overshooting this confounded scale and overshooting it. I've had some of the
fanciest examples of this scale you ever saw, and assessed with them, you know, and so on,
and just assessed with them, man, and gone clear on down to the end of the list, and TA
remains high and the charge isn't on the list. That's how this scale was formulated. Total
empiricism. See, just what is it? What is it? What is the missing charge? What is the missing
charge? And I knew it didn't have it. Well, I finally managed to get around and found out that
we were not missing charge, and so forth, so we obviously had it. And the last one on the list
was F, False. And that is what a thetan mostly objects to. That is one of his heaviest buttons:
a false communication. He himself feels guiltiest about uttering a false communication, or
abetting a false reality or a false attitude. Under this heading, you could say, "Well, we
should have a line that says `Was there a betrayal in this incident?'" you know? Obviously
that'd read, but unfortunately it doesn't respond, because a betrayal is actually just a falsity.

Betrayal. There's a big sign says Ice Cream Cones Free Inside. And so you walk inside and
there's this cage drops down and the machinery grinds. See? Well, what on earth is every
theta trap on the track but a false representation? Falsity. It's the one thing that aberrates a
person, because his level of trust with the physical universe drops, you see? He can't trust the
very reality he's looking at; in some way it's been falsified. And so he begins to ARC break
with the stuff.

So that was a key button. And the funny part of it is I expressed that one time as "twisted" or
"perverted" and you know, it didn't assess. Didn't communicate. Didn't even vaguely
communicate. "Perverted communication," "twisted communication," "altered
communication"-these things just didn't communicate, till I finally got down to "a false
communication." And man, you'll find out, I think, that communicates.

The PC you assess this on or the PC that you run this process on, naturally, here and there,
has to get a reinterpretation. You say "missed withhold." Well, that communicates to thee and
me, but does it communicate to the PC you're running, don't you see? You say, "Is there
something you were holding back? He-oo! Was there a kept secret?" That kind of thing.
"Was there a kept secret in the incident?"

But it's actually senseless to give you all possible wordings of all possible questions. See,
that's senseless, because that you can't work with. All possible wordings of all possible
questions is just a gobbledygook. One ARC break: you assess a dictionary. One of these
Webster dictionaries, you know? Complete with obsolete words.

So, therefore, therefore, I've given you the basic formula of assessment, and that formula of
assessment is you take each level of the old CDEI Scale- now expanded to K, U, C, D, E, I,
Zero, F each element of that, and you move it over here into that.

Now actually, each level only has six, but if you put them on different cards, you have to add
your missed withhold in the incident, missed withhold earlier, which gives you a basic list of
eight. Your basic list of eight-you must never get less than eight. And by putting that over,
you can do all sorts of things. You can preassess. You can bobtail the number of levels you're
going to have. You can do this and that. But still, the least I can do is give you the absolute,
complete list.

So for each one of the K, U, C, D, E, I, Zero and F, we have the possibility of affinity, reality,
communication, and a missed withhold in the incident; and then an affinity, reality,
communication and missed withhold in earlier incidents, or earlier charge, something like
that. And you can make up one of the fanciest little wheels you ever wanted to see.



I imagine you can take this particular schema of some kind or another, and you can draw up
dozens of different systems by which this can be used. And you can certainly draw up dozens
of different wordings. For instance, right away you're up against at A, attitude. "Was there a
Tone Scale . . . ?" That doesn't communicate, see, but that's what we mean. Affinity. Person
says affinity, well, they must mean love. You know, bang. You know? But those semantics
are for your delivery to the PC, so one of your basic breakdowns is you say "attitude," and
then you also say "emotion."

Now, you realize you could break that down further and put "effort" in there. You realize that
the whole Know to Mystery Scale can go under A. I hope you recognize that. See? The whole
Know to Mystery Scale, and they're s11- part of that A. So you could have symbols, and so
forth. You could get mighty fancy. You just substitute it for that. And you start getting that
fancy, however, you sure better develop a system of preassessment to get it all sorted out.

Now, I have one correction to make in R2H. I have led you to believe-I have led you to
believe, erroneously perhaps, that the best system was to clean every level. That is in actual
fact the easiest-to-audit system which gives you the least dirty needle, and does not
necessarily release the most charge from the case. And I thought I'd better give you slight
addendum to that. Because if you can skitter down a list rapidly and pick out the major
charge, the biggest read off of that list, and bang that back at the PC, you're getting more tone
arm action per minute of auditing time, you see? Which gives you then, if it can be done, the
best system. That doesn't necessarily say that it is the most doable system. You got that?

Now, some PC who drags the bypassed charge through the remainder of the list every time
you touch any charge at all-you get into endless difficulty if you try to assess the whole list
and take the biggest read and give him that, and have him explain that in full with the itsa line
in, full, see? That gives you the most tone arm action per minute of auditing time, see?
Obviously, because you get the blowdown right now, and so forth. But if you run into too
much difficulty doing that-and an auditor who is having difficulty at all with a PC, or a PC
who is having difficulties coping, a needle that is hard to read, a meter that is hard to read,
and all these things are quite usual in auditing, you see-you treat it like end rudiments. Treat
it like end rudiments and clean it up all the way down.

But in any event, no matter what system you use, you have to be satisfied.

Now, there's a liability to treating it with end rudiments that I must inform you of. I say this
is the easiest for the auditor to do, and is very often the most easy and comfortable on the PC
because the PC is, after all, sitting there all during the rest of the assessment-by the time
you've bypassed the bypassed charge the PC may almost have steam coming out of his ears,
you see? As you go down this list, you can, by treating it like end rudiments (this has a
liability) destroy the major read, because you've bled the charge of read already, and all you
get is a slight hump of the needle as you go past this thing. You don't get the major charge
that is going to give you the blowdown, reading with a good sharp tsk! see? You don't get
that. Instead of that, it now, v. hen you meet up with it, simply puts a hump on the needle.

See, because if you took it without bleeding the ARC break of any charge, the ARC break has
got enough charge in it to give you a good sharp read. But if you bleed that ARC break down
by taking every tick of it off, why, you're liable to get to a situation where the meter is very
difficult to read, because it's just a slow or a speed will become the major charge.
So if you're going to do this rudiments system all the way down like rudiments, then you also
have to take those slows and speeds. So it gives you a new problem in reading the meter in
return for having solved your dirty needle. See, you get a new problem.

There are many ways by which to do this. The way that gives you the most tone arm action
that you can run, that the PC will sit still for, is the way to use-obvious. Obvious, that's the
way to use.



Now, if you've got a preassessment on this particular list, and you could preassess, and move
right in on the hard charge-see, that is the list, bang!- it's rather brief assessment, don't
you see? And therefore it goes powie! see? You just go right on down the line and get your
biggest read, bow! And you say, "That's it. What is it?" And the PC has to figure it out and
give you the itsa on it and be perfectly satisfied with it. And you'll see that tone arm go pow!
and down she'll come, see? You're all satisfied with that one. That ARC break doesn't read
on the meter. Up goes your next one. "Recall an ARC break"; your tone arm starts up with
the whatsa-the whats it line. And do your assessment. Get, of course, your "What was it?
Where was it? When was it?" Get your assessment in on it. Get that charge. And you'll see
that tone arm, pow! It'll come down again as soon as the PC picks it up. And you'll get a tone
arm which is moving, moving, moving, moving, moving, getting looser and looser and
looser, if you do it that particular way.

Too shortened a list, too abbreviated, so as to miss the principal charge, leaves you with a
high TA. In actual fact what happens is charge moves the time wrong in an incident. The
incident is all charged up because of something that happened in 1912. So the charge of the
incident is in 1912, the incident is in 1920. Wrong date.

Now, if your List One does not specify that charge, you of course are going to miss the 1912
charge, and the incident will continue to look to the PC like 1912. It's very interesting. Your
TA will get higher and higher and get stickier and stickier, and the thing will eventually go
over the moon, and you'll have it riding up here at 5.25, and R2H is working less and less
well, no matter what you do.

Well, actually, you're restimulating charge which you aren't picking up, and the inevitable
fact when you do that is the PC will get harder and harder to audit and eventually he'll ARC
break, just on the diagrams I gave you concerning the itsa-the whatsit and itsa line.

Want to make one little more remark to you. That's all there is about that. I hope you can
evolve one of the things. Okay?

I want to make one other remark to you. I thought of a process. This is just research, see? I
thought of a process by which you could possibly see a tone arm pump at your will. See? You
could probably see it go You say, "Recall a worry"-see, whatsit. Because a worry is
obviously whatsit, like crazy! See? "Recall a worry. What was it about? Recall a worry. What
was it about? Recall a worry. What was it about?" You'll be able to drill your tone arm up
and down on a PC with that particular type of process. It's not particularly therapeutic. I'm
just showing you, here's a way to make a tone arm actually work for you so you would see
the whatsit-itsa line in complete operation, providing you let the PC tell you what it was
about.

Now, I can show you how to get a tone arm high and keep it there: "Recall a worry; recall a
worry; recall a worry; recall a worry; recall a worry. That's all right. Don't bother to tell me
what it is. Recall a worry...."

The other thing you're going to worry about, and I already had some questions on it: You've
probably audited a PC one time or another that got very good tone arm action but didn't get
any better. This is a possibility that you may have run into. Let me call to your attention
something in that bulletin that came out there, is tone arm action, if present, will take the PC
eventually to OT. But let me point out the word eventually, and even later in that bulletin it
says, "even if it takes thousands of years," you understand? You understand?

You're at least getting somewhere if you have tone arm action, is the only point I'm putting
across. Well, what is the expectancy? Well, that's pretty long. You have to run the right
significance's. Very often you've got a PC who is getting tone arm action all right, tone arm
pumping around. You may have changed the process right in the middle of the tone arm
action. See? Well, now you've got a whole bunch of new charge without blowing the old
charge, and the PC is going to go on feeling very uncomfortable while getting better. Charge



is coming off, don't you see, but the specific thing that you were after didn't happen with the
PC.

The way to analyze something like that is, what did you consider "better"? And how long did
you just sit there and let the tone arm waggle, without chipping off new charge and throwing
it into restimulation on the case? of course the case was getting better, but a case can get
better comfortably, and a case can get better very uncomfortably, and a case can get better
insufferably bad off. That's right. You start running screen implants- stuff that's been
restimulated on these screens in the between-life area, you see? You got a tremendous
quantity of track back to the last date that has never been restimulated by the screens, see?
More modern stuff is not screen restimulated. You get back earlier, and you'll run into a span
where you've got screen-restimulated engrams. And my God, they've been restimulated
every sixty or seventy years, don't you see, for the last ten thousand or something like that.
Every time you died, you got that particular set of engrams beautifully, gorgeously steamed
up. And man, you get in and you start to run them today, you get tone arm action, but you just
wish that you just hadn't started it in the first-why not just go up through the between-lives
area again and get it all over with.

You're getting tone arm action, but getting better is not how the PC feels. See? It's whether
he's making more progress to more knowingness and more ability. Also, his current state in
auditing is not a measure of his getting better. He can have a beautiful memory, hit the
between-lives area and his memory goes blop! He's getting better. He can't remember a
thing. But he is closer to being able to remember everything. You understand?

So you can put certain things into restimulation in a case that bring about temporary
conditions on the case. And they're pretty ghastly sometimes. And sometimes they're not
well taken care of, and they stay that way for quite a while, and then one day they all blow
out.

You've got to review a case over a period of the thirty days. You've got to review a case at
least over the period of an intensive, or the period of thirty days, or something like that. I had
an example of that the other day. I was thinking about organizations and Dianetics and
Scientology. Matter of fact I was giving an auditing session, and a bunch of data was coming
up that spanned that period. And you know, I was absolutely amazed. I had never taken a
look between the improvement of 1951 and 1963, and its interim states. You know, I mean
just-you know-what were we doing then? What were the organizations like then? What
were our communications like then? Wow, you know? l thought, "Good heavens. At this rate
of speed we're going to take this planet over practically tomorrow! " It's true, too. We are.

Thank you very much!
Professional auditing in any place on the planet http://timecops.net/english.html http://0-48.ru https://www.facebook.com/Galactic_Patro ... 206965424/ Auditor class X, skype: timecops
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