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L. RON HUBBARD
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R.
R , 1. routine-prefix on process designations. (HCOB 23 Aug 65) See
ROUTINE
for process designations like R3R, R3N, R6EW, etc. 2. example, R2-25,
“Routine” followed by the research code number of the process. When
processes
are being researched and developed they are given numbers and some become
known by these numbers rather than names. (BTB 20 Aug 71R). 3. reality.
(SH Spec 304, 6309C10) 4. when an issue is cancelled, the number is
followed
by R on the next issue meaning revised. (HCO PL 2 May 72)
RABBIT, n. person who runs from everything including his bank. (HCOB 26
Apr
71 II)-v. to run away from the bank. (HCOB 10 Apr 72)
RADIATION, is either a particle or wave-length, nobody can say for sure.
Let's
define it as a capability of influencing matter, and that that capability can
be
exerted across space. (AAR, p. 68)
RANDOMITY, 1. the amount of predicted and unpredicted motion a person
has, in
ratio. He likes 50/50. (PAB 30) 2. the degree of randomity is
measured by the
randomness of effort vectors within the organism, amongst organisms,
amongst races or species of organisms or between organisms and the physical
universe. (Scn 0-8, p. 79) 3. a component factor and necessary part
of motion, if
motion is to continue. The three degrees of randomity consist of minus
randomity, optimum randomity, and plus randomity. (Scn 0-8, p. 79)
4. the misalignment through the internal or external efforts by other
forms of life
or the material universe of the efforts of an organism, and is imposed on the
physical organism by counter-efforts in the environment. (Scn 0-8, p. 78)
RANDOM RUDIMENT, a rudiment put into the session at any time the
pc seems
to need it. Example: pc seems ARC broken so one asks if he is and handles. Or
pc is antagonistic so one asks for a W/H. Or pc seems restless, one asks if
there
is a PTP. (It is far safer to do an L1C prepared list or a C/S 53RJ as then
one can
be sure which rudiment went out. (LRH Def. Notes)
RAPID TR-2, see CR0000-2 .
RAPPORT, rapport is mutual feelingness. To have rapport with
something you
can be it. (BTB 7 Apr 72R)
RATIONAL CONFLICT, while man is concerned with any of the eight dynamics,
any one of them may become antipathetic to his own survival. This is rational
conflict and is normally and commonly incidental to survival. It is
non-aberrative
in that it is rational within the educational limitation. (DTOT, p.
32)
RATIONALITY, 1. is ability to recognize and meet the magnitude of effort
(counter-effort) being applied to the individual. (DAB, Vol. II, p. 100,
1951-52)
2. the computational accuracy of the individual modified by aberration,
education
and viewpoint. (DASF)
RATIONALIZATION, is wholly an attempt to shunt responsibility. (AP&A,
p. 58)
RATIONAL THOUGHT, optimum type of thought. This is used by a
Clear.
(DTOT, p. 43)
RAVE SUCCESS STORY, one given voluntarily without coercion or threat by
the
pc which expresses actual improvement and benefit due to auditing received in
complimentary terms which may include to Scientology, the Founder, the C/S
and/or the Auditor. (HCO PL 21 Oct 73R)
RAW MEAT PRECLEAR, 1. one who has never had Scn processing. (HCOB 16
Jan 68) 2. the guy thinks he's a brain. He doesn't know he's a
thetan, he isn't up
there and he thinks he's deteriorated into a bit of matter,
he thinks he's a body and
so forth. Hence this jocular term “raw meat.” (SH Spec 43,
6410C20)
RD, rundown. (HCOB 24 Sept 71)
REACH AND WITHDRAW, 1. reach and withdraw are the two fundamentals
in the action of theta. (COHA, p. 241) 2. to grasp and let go. (PAB
9) [“Reach”
and “Withdraw” process commands can be found in HCOB 1 Apr 70, Ethics
Program No. 1 Case Actions. ]
REACTION TIME, it's how fast thought can recognize a situation and act
upon it.
(UPC 3)
REACTIVATED, an engram is reactivated when an individual with an
engram
receives something in his environment similar to the perceptions in the
engram.
The engram puts everything it contains into greater or lesser operation.
(DMSMH, p. 73) See RE STIMULATION .
REACTIVE, 1. irrational, reacting instead of acting. (Scn AD) 2. that means
instantaneous response. (SH Spec 292, 6308C07)
REACTIVE ACTION, this is the essence of reactive action. A thetan
unwilling
to or actually unable to duplicate a somethingness tries to make nothing of
everything as he counts upon the environment to fix his attention and himself
does not fix it by choice; when he is in a very bad state a thetan then sees
only
those things which have mass and are in action and neglects those
things which
do not have mass and are not in action. (Abil 23)
REACTIVE BANK, 1. a stimulus-response machine of some magnitude. (PXL, p.
217) 2. unconscious mind. (Cert, Vol. 14, No. 7) See REACTIVE MIND.
REACTIVE CONDUCT, when the reactive mind is able to exert its
influence
upon a person far better than the thetan himself can, we say this person is
suffering from reactive conduct. He has a reactive mind. In
other words, his
association has become too blatantly in error for him any longer to conceive
differences and we get identification: A=A=A=A. (5702C28)
REACTIVE MIND, 1. a portion of a person's mind which works on a
totally
stimulus-response basis, which is not under his volitional control, and which
exerts force and the power of command over his awareness, purposes, thoughts,
body and actions. Stored in the reactive mind are engrams, and here we
find
the single source of aberrations and psychosomatic ills. (Scn 0-8, p. 11) 2.
comprises an unknowing, unwanted series of aberrated computations which bring
about an effect upon the individual and those around him. It is an obsessive
strata
of unknown, unseen, uninspected data which are forcing solutions, unknown and
unsuspected, on the individual-which tells you why it remained hidden from
man for so many thousands of years. (Scn 0-8, p. 11) 3. is basically
that area of
occlusion which the pc is unable to contact and which contains within itself
a total
identification of all things with all things, and until released into the
realm of
knowingness continues to react upon the person compelling him into
actions,
dramatizations and computations which are not optimum to his or anyone else's
survival. ( SH Spec 35, 6108C08) 4. the reactive mind is a
stimulus response
mechanism, ruggedly built, and operable in trying circumstances. The reactive
mind never stops operating. Pictures of the environment, of a very low
order,
are taken by this mind even in some states of unconsciousness. The reactive
mind acts below the level of consciousness. It is the literal
stimulus-response
mind. Given a certain stimulus it gives a certain response. (FOT, p. 58) 5. once
called the “unconscious” mind. It is a tough, rugged mind which
is alert during
any moment of life, regardless of the presence of pain, and which records
everything with idiotic faithfulness. It stores up the entheta and enmest of
an
accident with all the perceptics (sense messages) present during the
“unconsciousness” resulting from the accident. (SOS, p. 9) 6. once
known as the
“unconscious mind,” but this terminology is highly
misleading, because the
reactive mind is the mind which is always conscious. (SOS, Bk. 2,
p. 182)
7. also known as the R6 bank. (HCOB 12 Jul 65)
REACTIVE PLEASURE, in the organism below 2 .0 (on the tone scale)
tending
toward death, a reactive pleasure is taken in the performance of acts
which
lead to succumbing on any of the dynamics. In other words, above 2.0 pleasure
is survival, and below 2.0 pleasure is obtained only by
succumbing or by
bringing death to other entities, or by causing self or other entities to be
suppressed on the tone scale. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 84)
REACTIVE THOUGHT, 1. thought established by counter-efforts as in Homo
sapiens and governed entirely in a stimulus-response basis. (Scn 8-8008, p.
36)
2. reactive thought is wholly in terms of everything in an engram equals
everything in an engram equals all the restimulators in the environment and
all
things associated with those restimulators. (DMSMH, p. 79)
READ, 1. a “tick” or a “stop” is not a read. Reads are
small falls or falls or long
falls or long fall blowdown (of TA). (HCOB 27 May 70) 2. the action
of the
needle on the E-meter dial falling (moving to the right). A “reading question”
is
one which causes the meter needle to fall to the right to a greater or lesser
extent
when the question is asked of the preclear or student with the person holding
the
electrodes. In word clearing a reading word is one which causes the
meter
needle to fall to the right when said, thought or read by the student or
called by
the word clearer with the student holding the electrodes. (BTB 12 Apr 72R)
READING ITEM, the read is taken when the pc first says it or when
the question is
cleared. This is the valid time of read. This reading defines
what is a reading
item or question. Calling it back to see if it read is not a valid
test as the surface
charge may be gone but the item or question will still run or list.
(HCOB 28 Feb
71)
READING QUESTION, see READING ITEM.
READING WORD, see READ.
REALITY, 1. is, here on earth, agreement as to what is. This does not
prevent
barriers or time from being formidably real. It does not mean either
that space,
energy or time are illusions. It is as one knows it is. (COHA, p. 249) 2.
that
sequence which can, we say this person is suffering from reactive conduct.
He has a reactive mind. In other words, his association has become too
blatantly in error for him any longer to conceive differences and we get
identification: A=A=A=A. (5702C28)
REAL UNIVERSE, one which contains space, energy and time. (Cert, Vol. 10,
No. 12)
REASON, 1. it's a very simple device by which a person's ability to
estimate effort
is measured. That's his reason. (5203CM04B) 2. effort plus
intention is
reason. Reason has to include the thought plus the effort. Thought plus
effort
is reason. (5203 CM06A) 3. the ability to extrapolate new
data from the
existing data. Reason is hand in glove with self-determinism. The
rehabilitation
of a person's self-determinism is the rehabilitation of his ability to reason.
(DAB, Vol. II, 1951-52, p. 70)
REBALANCING, letting the case settle to bring it back to a workable
state.
(DMSMH, p. 294)
RECALL, 1. present time remembering something that happened in the past.
It is not
re-experiencing it, re-living it or re-running it. Recall does not
mean going back
to when it happened. It simply means that you are in present time, thinking
of,
remembering, putting your attention on something that happened in the past-all
done
from present time. (HCOB 14 Oct 68 II) 2. the process of regaining
perceptions. (Scn 0-8, p. 85) 3. implies that you bring it up to
present and look at
it. (SH Spec 84, 6612C13)
RECALL PROCESSES, processes which deal with the pc remembering things
that happened in his past. (HCOB 30 Sept 71 V)
RECALL RELEASE, expanded ARC Straightwire release. (CG&AC 75) See ARC
STRAIGHTWIRE RELEASE.
RECEIPT POINT, effect is the receipt point of the communication.
(Dn 55!, p.
70)
RECESSION, 1. you may find you get into a little light engram and you
find it
won't lift and you go over it and then it faded away. This is recession. You
can
do this and three days later have a stalled case on your hands. This engram
you
have beaten down comes back in full force in three days. (NOTL, p. 108) 2.
during a recession the somatic of the engram first reduces slightly
and then
continues constant. In the reduction, the somatic, little by little each
recounting,
reduces. In a recession, the somatic remains steady. If a recession
takes place,
it means simply that an engram similar to the one which is being
re-experienced is
earlier on the case, or that a tremendous quantity of entheta in secondaries and
locks exists above the engram that is being recessed. Recessions occur
only
where the auditor has not taken off enough entheta from the case in the form
of
locks and secondaries to permit engrams to be run. It is a premature address
to
engrams or it is caused by auditing in violation of the file clerk's data.
(SOS, Bk.
2, p. 173)
RECOUNTING, the principle of recounting is very simple. The
preclear is merely
told to go back to the beginning of the incident and to tell it all over
again. He
does this many times. As he does it the engram should lift in tone on each
recounting. (DTOT, p. 103)
RECURRING WITHHOLDS, the pc that gives the same withhold over and
over
to the same or different auditors, has an unknown
incident underlying it. All is not revealed on that chain. (HCOB 21 Mar 62)
RED-HERRING, Slang. to go chasing after facsimiles. (SLP, Iss. 7R)
RED TAG, a large red card placed on the outside front cover of a pc
folder which
indicates that a repair session must be done within 24 hours or if a full FES
is
required, within 72 hours. (BTB 20 Jan 73RB)
REDUCE, 1. to take all the charge or pain out of an incident. This means
to have the
preclear recount the incident from beginning to end (while returned to it in
reverie)
over and over again, picking up all the somatics and perceptions present just
as
though the incident were happening at that moment. To reduce means,
technically, to render free of aberrative material as far as possible to make
the case
progress. (DMSMH, p. 287) 2. to render an engram free from somatic or
emotion by recountings. (NOTL Gloss)
REDUCED FACSIMILE, is a facsimile which no longer has the capability of
absorbing your attention units into a mock-up of it. (5206CM24B)
REDUCTION, a reduction is done exactly as an erasure, but the
engram will not
completely erase, remaining, after a few recountings, in a more or less
static
condition of low aberrative power and with no physical pains remaining in it.
(SOS, Bk. 2, p. 172)
RE-EXPERIENCE, you re-experience a facsimile by seeing it, hearing
it, feeling
everything in it including, especially, your own thoughts and conclusions.
Just as
though you were there again. (HFP, p. 86)
REGIMEN, 1. a certain settled schedule of things. (7204C07 SO III) 2.
the work
horse combination of processes, that boosts the case to clear after if has
been
started. (HCOB 1 Dec 60)
REGRET, 1. is what inverts the time track, one wishes it hadn't happened
and so he
tries to collapse the track on the point. Actually overt acts collapse the
track but
the emotion of regret is experienced at that level. (5904C08) 2. the
action of
trying to make time run backwards. (5206CM24E) 3. simply an effort to
take
something out of the time stream, “I'm sorry it happened. I wish it hadn't
happened.” (5112CM29A) 4. entirely the study of reversed
postulates. One
intended to do something good and one did something bad or one intended to do
something bad and accidentally did something good. Either incident would be
regretted. (PAB 91)
REHAB, rehabilitate. (HCOB 4 Jan 71)
REHABBING DRUGS, using the data from the Pc Assessment Form, rehab in
turn each drug by counting the number of times released for each type
of drug
to F/N. (BTB 25 Oct 71R II) See also CHEMICAL RELEASE.
REHABILITATION, when the person was originally released he had become
aware
of something that caused the reactive mind to de-stimulate at that point or
become
weak. And so he released. You have to find that point of sudden awareness
again. To regain a former release (or thetan exterior or keyed-out OT;
released
OT). (HCOB 30 Jun 65) Abbr. Rehab.
REJECTION LEVEL, the condition in which a person or object must be, in
order
that the preclear be able to reject it freely. (COHA Gloss)
RELEASE, n. 1. one who knows he or she has had worthwhile gains from Scn
processing and who knows he or she will not now get worse. (HCOB 9 Aug 63)
2. a person whose case “won't get any worse.” He begins to gain by
living rather
than lose. (HCOB 17 Mar 59 II) 3. a person who has been able to back
out of his
bank. The bank is still there but the person isn't sunk into it with all its
somatics
and depressions. (HCOB 2 Apr 65) 4. a release purely and
simply is a person
who has obtained results in processing and has a reality on the fact that he
has
attained those results. That severely is the definition of release. (SH
Spec 159,
6206C19) 5. a release is an individual from whom have been released
the
current or chronic mental and physical difficulties and painful emotion.
(DMSMH, p. 170) 6. a series of gradual key-outs. At any given one of
those
key-outs the individual detaches from the remainder of his reactive bank. (SH
Spec 65, 6507C27)-v. the act of taking the perceptions or effort or
effectiveness
out of a heavy facsimile or taking away the preclear's hold on the facsimile.
(HFP
Gloss)
RELEASED OT, 1. if a being is a first, second or third stage release and
has also
become exterior to his body in the process, we simply add “OT” to the
state of
release. It is secondary in importance to the fact of being a release.
As
soon as the being seeks to exert his “OT” powers he tends to restimulate
his R6
bank and so goes back into his body. (HCOB 12 Jul 65) 2. temporarily
up and
feeling high and great but he can fall on his head. (SH Spec 82, 6611C29)
RELEASE OF AFFECT, 1. by first getting the patient to find and say what
shock
occurred when the sickness began, getting when, and getting it recounted, the
“illness” will lessen, the emotional state will alter-called a release
of affect.
(HCOB 2 Apr 69) 2. a misemotional discharge. (SH Spec 65, 6507C27)
RELIABLE ITEM, 1. Symbol: R.I. any item that rock slams well on
being found
and at session end and which was the last item still in after
assessing the list.
Can be a terminal, opposition terminal, a combination terminal or a
significance,
provided only that it was the item found on a list and rock slammed.
(HCOB 8
Nov 62) 2. an item which the pc got after the list was nulled,
and it's reliable
and can be used to obtain further items. That is a reliable item. (SH
Spec
202A, 6210C23) 3. can be an oppterm or a terminal and that meant one
that
slams when found. (SH Spec 203A, 6210C23) 4. a black mass with a
significance in it which is dominated by a goal and which is part of a GPM.
(HCOB 13 Apr 64, Scn VI Part I Glossary of Terms)
RELIEF RELEASE, expanded Grade II release. (CG&AC 75) See GRADE II
RELEASE.
RELIGION, 1. the ritual of worship or regard about spiritual
matters. (4 LACC-18,
5510C13) 2. a study of wisdom. (HCO PL 6 Mar 69) 3. the word religion
itself can embrace sacred lore, wisdom, knowingness of gods and souls and
spirits, and could be called, with very broad use of the word, a philosophy.
We
could say there is religious philosophy and there is religious practice.
(PXL,
p. 13)
RELIGIOUS PHILOSOPHY, implies study of spiritual manifestations; research
on the nature of the spirit and study on the relationship of the spirit to
the body;
exercises devoted to the rehabilitation of abilities in a spirit. (HCOB 18
Apr 67)
RELIGIOUS PRACTICE, implies ritual, faith-in, doctrine based on a
catechism
and a creed. (HCOB 18 Apr 67)
RELIVING, where a man is so thoroughly in the past for the moment that
while he
was recalling an infant experience, if startled he would react just as he
would have
when a baby. (DMSMH, p. 197)
REMEDY, 1. by remedy one means the correction of any aberrated condition.
(PAB 50) 2. something you do to get the pc into condition for routine
auditing.
(HCOB 27 Sept 64) 3. an auditing process which is designed to handle
a non-routine
situation. (HCOB 11 Dec 64)
REMEDY A, 1. locates the misunderstoods a person has in Scn. (HCOB 9 Nov
67)
2. has to do with definitions in Scn or the present subject. You must
not miss
that, it's present subject, immediate subject. It's the immediate subject the
guy's
trying to study. It's not just applicable to Scn. This guy is trying to study
engineering and he hasn't understood a term in engineering. Well, you could
handle that with Remedy A. (SH Spec 47, 6411C17)
REMEDY B, 1. seeks out and handles a former subject, conceived to be
similar to
the immediate subject, in order to clear up misunderstandings in the
immediate
subject or condition. (HCOB 12 Nov 64) 2. Remedy B is former subject.
He's
got the present immediate subject mixed up with some former subject. So now
you've got to find the former subject and find the word in it which hasn't
been
defined. (SH Spec 47, 6411C17)
REMEDY OF HAVINGNESS, 1. remedy of havingness does not mean
stuffing the preclear with energy. It means remedying his ability to have or
not
have energy. (Dn 55 .', p. 117) 2. by “remedy” one
means the correction of
any aberrated condition. By “havingness” one means mass or
objects. It means
the remedy of a preclear's native ability to acquire things at will
and reject them
at will. (PAB 50) 3. means remedy of the condition of having
to have.
(9ACC-1, 5412CM06)
REMEDY OF LAUGHTER (R2-26), in the Remedy of Laughter the preclear
can be made simply to stand up and start laughing. The goal of the process is
to
regain the ability to laugh without reason. This process is done until
the preclear
can actually enjoy a laugh without any reason whatsoever, without
believing that
laughing without reason is insane, without feeling self-conscious about
laughing, and without needing any boost from the auditor. (COHA, pp.
68-70)
REMEMBERING, 1. one could recall the fact that one had seen a dog chase a
cat.
That would be remembering. (HFP, p. 26) 2. the process of
knowing the
past; predicting of knowing the future. (PAB 86)
REMIMEO, Churches which receive this must mimeograph it again and
distribute
it to staff. (HCOB 4 Sept 71 III).
REMOTE VIEWPOINT, 1. a viewpoint without
the consideration by the thetan
that he is located at that point. The thetan may have any number of remote
viewpoints. ( COHA Gloss) 2. a technical term meaning a thetan
who is afraid
to look from where he is. He puts out viewpoints over there and looks
from
that. (5410CMlOB)
REPAIR, 1. patching up past auditing or recent life errors. This is done
by prepared
lists or completing the chain or correcting lists or even two-way comm or
prepchecks on auditors, sessions, etc. (HCOB 23 Aug 71) 2. repair is
undertaken to eradicate errors made in auditing or the environment which
impede
the use of major processes. (HCOB 12 Jun 70)
REPAIR OF HAVINGNESS, we used to call repair of havingness “giving
him some havingness.” (PAB 72)
REPAIR PROGRAM, 1. takes the case from where it has falsely gotten to on
the
class chart and gets off the overwhelm with light processes. (HCOB 14 Jun 70)
2. program to eradicate case mishandling by current life or auditing
errors
(called a set-up program). (HCOB 12 Jun 70) 3. progress program. (HCOB
30
Jun 70R)
REPEATER TECHNIQUE, 1. the repetition of a word or phrase in order
to
produce movement on the time track into an entheta area containing that word
or
phrase. Repeating or “rolling” a phrase in an engram in order to
de-intensify the
phrase or reduce the engram is not repeater technique. (SOS, Bk. 2, p.
68)
2. after he has placed the patient in reverie, if he discovers the
patient, for
instance, insists he “can't go anyplace,” the auditor makes him repeat
the
phrase. Repetition of such a phrase, over and over, sucks the patient
back
down the track and into contact with an engram which contains it. It may
happen
that this engram will not release-having too many before it-but it will not
release only in case it has that same phrase in an earlier engram. So the repeater
technique is continued with the auditor making the patient go earlier and
earlier
for it. If all goes on schedule the patient will very often let out a chuckle
or a
laugh of relief. The phrase has been sprung. (DMSMH, p. 215) 3. the
file clerk
is asked for data on certain subjects, particularly those affecting the
return and
travel on the time track, and which aid the ability of the preclear to
contact
engrams. (DMSMH, p. 225)
REPETITIVE AUDITING CYCLE, is a specialized activity. There's the
auditing cycle of one cycle. Then there's the auditing cycle of
the next cycle
etc. You must complete all comm cycles of an auditing cycle. (SH Spec
290,
6307C25)
REPETITIVE COMMAND AUDITING, using TRs 0 to 4, at Level I is done
completely muzzled. This could be called muzzled repetitive auditing style
but
will be called “muzzled style” for the sake of brevity. At Level I we
don't expect
the auditor to do anything but state the command (or ask the question) with
no
variation, acknowledge the pc's answer and handle the pc origins by
understanding and acknowledging what the pc said. (HCOB 6 Nov 64)
REPETITIVE PREPCHECKING, prepchecking by repetitive command.
This type of prepchecking is more easily done and more thorough than
prepchecking by the withhold system and its earlier forefather security
checking. (HCOB 3 Jul 62)
REPETITIVE PROCESS, 1. is simply a process that is run over and
over with
the same question of the pc. The pc answers the thing and the auditor gives
him
an acknowledgment. Gives him TR-4 on his origins and it is run until it is
flat.
(SH Spec 169, 6207C10) 2. process which permits the individual to
examine
his mind and environment and out of it select the un-importances and
importances. (SH Spec 67, 6509C21).
REPETITIVE RUDIMENTS, (1) run the rudiment
as a repetitive process
until pc has no answer; (2) consult meter for a hidden answer; (3) if meter
reads
use it to steer (“that” “that” each time the meter flicks) the pc to
the answer; (4) lay
aside the meter and do (1) and (2) and (3). The process is flat when there is
no
instant read to the question. (HCOB 2 Jul 62)
REPETITIVE STRAIGHTWIRE, straightwire to one incident done over and
over until the incident is de-sensitized. (AP&A, p. 22)
REPLAY, a bad habit some preclears have of playing over what they
remember they
said the last time instead of progressing through the engram freshly on each
recounting and contacting what is contained in the engram itself. (DMSMH, p.
279)
REPRESENT LIST, 1. in Routine 2-12 a list from the line question
“Who or what
does . . . represent to you?” (HCOB 23 Nov 62) 2. search and
discovery as a
process is done exactly by the general rules of listing. One lists for
persons or
groups who are or have suppressed the pc. The list is complete when only one
item reads on nulling and this is the item. If the item turns out to be a
group, one
does a second list of “Who or what would represent (item)?”
gets the list long
enough to leave on nulling only one item reading, and that is the SP. (HCOB
24
Nov 65)
REPRESSIONS, 1. things pc must prevent himself from doing. (BTB 24 Apr
69R)
2. a command that the organism must not do something. (DTOT, p. 58)
REPUTATIONAL WITHHOLD, he must withhold it because it will damage
his
beingness, in other words his reputation. (SH Spec 63, 6110C05)
RESERVATION, is entering into an outgoing flow an impetus to make it flow
less
hard and hit less hard. (HCL-5, 5203CM05A)
RESISTIVE CASE, 1. symptoms of a resistive case are thick review
folder,
roller-coasters, complains, blows courses or churches, long sessions, hard to
get
F/Ns, doesn't want auditing, makes trouble for auditors, and/or does not
respond
to auditing. (HCOB 8 Sept 71) 2 . TA in normal range but not
responding well to
auditing. (BTB 11 Aug 72RA)
RESPONSIBILITY, 1. the ability and willingness to assume the status of
full
source and cause for all efforts and counter-efforts on all dynamics.
(AP&A, p.
57) 2. when one speaks of responsibility he means “the
determination of the
cause which produced the effect.” (AP&A, p. 62) 3. full
responsibility is not
fault; it is recognition of being cause. (AP&A, p. 58) 4. willingness
to make or
unmake barriers. (PAB 30) 5. the feeling that one can operate
something. (PAB
31) 6. the area or sphere of influence the individual can rationally
affect around
other people, life, mest and the general environment. (SOS, p. 142) 7. admission
of control of space, energy and objects. (PDC 4) 8. it is willingness
to own or
act or use or be. (PDC 56) 9. the concept of being able to care for,
to reach or to
be. (HCO PL 17 Jan 62) 10. “admit causing,” “able
to withhold.” (HCOB 21
Jan 60, Responsibility)
RESPONSIBILITY (A PROCESS), 1. has three commands. “You look around
here and find something you could be responsible for.” “You look
around here
and find something you don't have to be responsible for.” “You
look around
here and find something you would permit somebody else to be responsible
for.” (SCP, p. 22) 2. “What part of that incident could you be responsible
for?” (SMC-5, 6001C02)
RESPONSIBLE FOR CONDITION CASES, is meant the person who insists a
book or some auditor is “wholly responsible for the terrible
condition I am in.”
(HCO PL 27 Oct 64)
RESTIMULATION, 1. the reactivation of a past counter-effort by appearance
in the
organism's environment of a similarity toward the content of the past
randomity
area. (Scn 0-8, p. 85) 2. means the reactivation of an existing
incident. (SH Spec
84, 6612C13) 3. where the environment reactivates a facsimile, which
then acts
back against the body or awareness of awareness unit of the person. This is a
very simple system of stimulus-response. (Dn 55!, p. 15) 4. where the
perceptics
of the engram are approximated by those of the present time environment.
(SOS,
Bk. 2, p. 118)
RESTIMULATION LOCK, merely brings to the person perceptions which
approximate those of an engram. If the individual is tired or weary, these
perceptions, sights, sounds, smells, or whatever they may be, will restimulate
the engram which has similar perceptics; and the incident becomes a lock on
the
engram and charges it to some small degree. (SOS, p. 113)
RESTIMULATOR, 1. restimulators are those approximations in the
environment
of an individual of the content of an engram. (DTOT, p. 42) 2. an
approximation
of the reactive mind's content or some part thereof continually perceived in
the
environment of the organism. (DTOT, p. 27) 3. the individual with an
engram
receives something in his environment similar to the perceptions in the
engram.
(DMSMH, p. 73) 4. words, voice tones, music, whatever they are-things
which are filed in the reactive mind bank as parts of engrams. (DMSMH p. 74)
RESTIMULATOR LAG, when a keyed-in engram was restimulated it often
required two or three days for action to take place. (Example: say a migraine
headache has as its restimulator a rhythmic burping sound; that sound
is heard
by the individual who has the engram; three days later he suddenly has a
migraine.) (DMSMH, p. 380)
REST POINT, an individual in a high-games condition is in motion. The
game gets
too high, and he drops out. So he goes into a no-games condition. You can
call
this a rest point on the track. (PAB 98)
RESULTS, defined: case achieves a reality on change of case, somatic
behavior or
appearance, for the better. (HCOB 28 Feb 59)
RETRACTOR, it is possible for a wave to act as a retractor. That
is to say, it is
possible for certain waves to pull back instead of push out. Thetans can put
out
such a retractor wave. (HOM, p. 54)
RETRACTOR BEAM, a retractor beam or a retractor loop is a beam which
goes out here from the source, hits the target then drags the target in. It's
to grab
hold of something and hold it and pull it in. That's one of its uses and the
other
use is to nail you into a body. (5207CM24A)
RETRAIN, is the entire
course as any green student would take it from beginning to
end. (ESTO 4, 7203C02 SO II)
RETRAINING, occurs where the student has continually flubbed sessions or
tech
actions or flunked exams. It is assumed he does not have a grasp of the data.
In
retraining the student may be ordered to redo the full requirements of
the
checksheets. (HCO PL 22 Jul 70 III)
RETREAD, 1. means picking up the materials that the auditor is weak on.
It's a
review course. But it does mean going through the pack and the materials of
the
particular level being retreaded. It's mostly a check of misunderstood
words,
Method 4 style word clearing, on the different sections of the materials of
the
course, emphasis being placed on what the auditor is weak on. (HCO PL 22 Feb
72) 2. retreading is different than retraining. Retread is
brushing up one's
study and knowledge and application of tech on the course one is redoing. It
is a
commendable action on one's own determinism. (HCO PL 22 Jul 70 III)
RETURN, regression in its simplest form, hereafter called return is
employed in Dn
auditing. Return is the method of retaining the body and the awareness of the
subject in present time while he is told to go back to a certain incident. (DTOT,
p.
87)
RETURNING, 1. the word used to go back and re-experience an incident.
(HCOB
14 Oct 68 II) 2. the technique in which the preclear is sent as early
as possible on
his track before therapy itself is engaged upon. (DMSMH, p. 225) 3. the
person
can “send” a portion of his mind to a past period on either a mental or
combined
mental and physical basis and can re-experience incidents which have taken
place
in his past in the same fashion and with the same sensations as before.
(DMSMH,
p. 11)
REVERIE, 1. in reverie the preclear is placed in a light state of “concentration”
which is not to be confused with hypnosis. The mind of the preclear will be
found to be to some degree detachable from his surroundings and directed
interiorly. (DTOT, p. 135) 2. D n reverie leaves a preclear
fully aware of
everything which is taking place and with full recall of everything which has
happened. (DMSMH, p. 165)
REVERSAL OF POSTULATE, one intends to do something by making a
postulate that it will take place, yet something else takes place. This
is a
reversal of postulate. (PAB 91)
REVERSE CURVE, THE, is the emotional curve rising from below 2 .0
to above
2 .0. It happens in a short space of time. It is important because it
locates allies.
(AP&A, p. 24)
REVIEW, 1. the Department of Review is in the Qualifications
Division. The entire
purpose of the Department of Review is repair and correction of
auditing and
training difficulties. Review is an extension of my own case cracker
hat and my
own fast instruction hat. (HCO PL 24 Apr 65) 2. that area
where standard tech is
corrected back to standard tech. (Class VIII No. 2)
REVIEW CODE, the code has four symbols, REV!, REV FL?, DECLARE?,
ETH? REV! means “This pc is in trouble! Please do a review hard.” REV FL?
means “Could you please find out if this process if flat for me?”
DECLARE?
means “Pc has reached a grade or release. Please look at pc and if okay,
pass on
to Certs and Awards.” ETH? means “This pc may be an ethics case,
roller-coasters
or no case gain.” (HCO PL 4 Jul 65)
REVIV, revivification. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)
REVIVIFICATION, the hypnotic subject could be sent back to a moment “entirely”
so that he gave every appearance of being the age to which he was returned
with
only the apparent faculties and recollections he had at that moment: this was
called
“revivification” (re-living). (DMSMH, p. 12) Abbr. reviv.
REVIVIFY, relive. (HCOB 11 May 65) Abbr. reviv.
R-FACTOR, 1. R or reality; reality factor. (HCOB 21 Dec 61) 2. telling
the
pc what you are going to do at each new step. (HCOB 23 Jun 62)
RHYTHM, actually a part of the time sense, but is also the ability to
tell the spaces
between sound waves which are pulsing regularly, as in the beating of a drum.
(SA, p. 85)
RHYTHMIC, KINESTHETIC, weight and motion. (Abil 149)
RI, reliable item. (HCOB 4 Aug 63)
RIDGE, 1. it's a standing apparent motionlessness of some kind or other,
an
apparent solidity, an apparent no-outflow-no-inflow, that's a ridge. Flows
have direction. Ridges have location. (5904C08) 2. a ridge is
caused by two
energy flows coinciding and causing an enturbulence of energy, which, on
examination, is found to take on a characteristic which in energy flows is
very
like matter, having its particles in chaotic mixture. (Scn 8-80, p. 43) 3.
a ridge
is formed from two flows and these two flows hitting will pile things up.
(PDC
18) 4. a ridge is essentially suspended energy in space. it comes
about by
flows, dispersals or ridges impinging against one another with a
sufficient
solidity to cause an enduring state of energy. (Scn 8-8008, p. 18) 5. a
solid body
of energy caused by various flows and dispersals which has a duration longer
than the duration of flow. Any piece of matter could be considered to be a ridge
in its last stage. Ridges, however, exist in suspension around a
person and are
the foundation upon which facsimiles are built. (Scn 8-8008, p. 49) 6.
facsimiles, or pictures, of motion. (Scn 8-80, p. 45) 7. areas of
dense waves.
(Scn 8-8008, p. 78) 8. electronic densities. (Scn Jour 6-G)
RIDICULE, 1. it's somebody grabbing hold of one of your anchor points,
claiming
it and holding it away from you. (5311CM17A) 2. pushing the anchor
points in
and then pulling them out and holding them out. (Spr Lect 17, 5304M08)
RIGHT, this would be forwarding a purpose not destructive to the majority
of the
dynamics. (Abil Ma 229)
RIGHT-HAND BUTTONS, mistake, suggest, decide, protest, these all make
things read. They don't keep things from reading, right-hand side. (SH
Spec
229, 6301C10)
RIGHTNESS, is conceived to be survival. Any action which assists survival
along
the maximal number of dynamics is considered to be a right action.
Theoretically, how right can one be? Immortal! (Scn 8-8008, p. 58).
RIGHT
THOUGHT, a thought which would promote the optimum survival of the
optimum number of dynamics. (5410CM20)
RIGIDITY, fixation in space. (2ACC-26A, 5312CM17)
RISE, is exactly opposite to a “fall”-the needle moves to your left
instead of to the
right. (BIEM, p. 42)
RISING NEEDLE, 1. means “no confront.” The preclear has struck an
area or
something he isn't confronting. One never calls his attention to this. But
one
knows what it is. It is a steady constant movement of the needle, rather
slow,
from right to left. (EME, p. 16) 2. a rising needle tells you
that the pc can't
confront, therefore has exceedingly low reality, responsibility, and
knowingness
on whatever significance it's rising on. (HCOB 12 Jun 61)
RISING SCALE PROCESSING, 1. in this process, an individual was
asked to
get one of the lower postulates on the Chart of Attitudes and then carry it
“upward” until he could get the higher idea. In this particular case one
would ask
the preclear to get the idea of losing and would then ask him to change that
as
nearly as he could to the idea of winning. (PAB 91) 2. is another way
of doing
postulate processing. One takes any point or column of the Chart of Attitudes
which the preclear can reach, and asks the preclear then to shift his
postulate
upwards toward a higher level. Rising-Scale processing is simply a
method
of shifting postulates upward toward optimum from where the preclear believes
he is on the chart. It is essentially a process directed toward increasing
belief in
self by using all the “buttons” on the Chart of Attitudes. (Scn 8-8008,
p. 84)
ROBOT, 1. the individual with an evil purpose has to withhold himself
because he
may do destructive things. When he fails to withhold himself he commits overt
acts on his fellows or other dynamics and occasionally loses control and does
so.
This of course makes him quite inactive. To overcome this he refuses any
responsibility for his own actions. Any motion he makes must be on the
responsibility of others. He operates then only when given orders. Thus he
must
have orders to operate. Therefore one could term such a person a robot and
the
malady could be called robotism. (HCOB 10 May 72) 2. a robot
is a machine
that somebody else runs. (5611C15)
ROCK, THE, 1. was something which we audited for and assessed out,
meaning a
shape of something which we could then run a process on. We at that time were
running on the theory that it was the first object the fellow had made on the
track.
(SH Spec 83, 6612C06) 2. that which a person has used to reach people
or
things with and is determined in value by its creativeness or
destructiveness. It is
simply a reach and withdraw mechanism which makes a ridge and this causes the
stick of the needle. The rock is an object not a significance. (HCOB
29 Jul 58)
ROCKET READ, 1. an RR is characterized by a spurted, accelerated
beginning,
which gives it its name. It looks like something taking off, like being shot;
shot
away from its start. It's a spurting beginning, and then its other
characteristic is a
curled end. (SH Spec 266, 6305C21) 2. it takes off. It always goes to
the right.
It takes off with a very fast spurt and does a rapid decay. Like a bullet
fired into
water. It's very fast. It looks like its got all of its motive power from its
first
instance of impulse with no additional motive power being imparted to it by
anything. It's kicked off and it has no further kick so it rapidly dies out.
(SH
Spec 224, 6212C13) 3. is the read of the goal or the rock itself.
(HCOB 6 Dec
62) 4. called a rocket read because it takes off like a rocket
and slows down.
(SH Spec 202A, 6210C23)
ROCK SLAM, Symbol: 1. R/S. called a rock slam because it is a
needle
manifestation which is achieved when the auditor is approaching what we once
called “the rock.” There's something earlier than the rock and
that's a goal. It's
a great deal of random needle motion occurring solely because of the current
being set up amongst the items and identities a person has assumed in the
progress of executing his or her goals. It could be called a goals slam which
we
will not call it. It's a thetan convulsing, and in the absence of a slamming
needle
you will very often find a convulsing body. A rock slam is a
crisscross of
currents which is throwing a thetan around . ( SH Spec 190, 6209C18) 2. a R/S or rock slam is defined as a crazy irregular slashing motion of the
needle.
It can be as narrow as one inch or more than a full dial in width, but it's
crazy! It
slams back and forth. It is actually quite startling to see one. It is
very different
from other meter phenomena. (HCOB 1 Nov 74) 3. that needle agitation
which
erratically covers more than three quarters of an inch on the E-meter dial. A
rock
slam is the response of an E-meter to the conflict between terminals and
opposition terminals. It indicates a fight, an effort to individuate, an
extreme
games condition which in the absence of auditing would seek unsuccessfully to
separate while attacking. As the pc's attention is guided to the items
involved the
games condition activates and is expressed on the meter as a ragged, frantic
response. The wider the response the more recognizable (to the pc) is the
reality
of the games condition and the violence of the conflict. (HCOB 8 Nov 62) 4. as a
meter representation, is the result of innumerable committed overts in a
certain
direction, and when you've got that certain direction isolated, that is to
say the
items against which the overts were committed isolated you then have of
course a
rock slam. (SH Spec 203, 6210C11) 5. a crazy, irregular, unequal,
jerky
motion of the needle narrow as one inch or as wide as three inches, happening
several times a second. The needle goes crazy, slamming back and
forth,
narrowly, widely over on the left, over on the right, in a mad war dance or
as if it
were frantically trying to escape. It means hot terminal or hot anything in
an
assessment and takes precedence over a fall. (EME, p. 17) 6. this is
the most
difficult needle response to find or attain or preserve. And it is the most
valuable
in clearing. All rock slams result from a pair of items in opposition,
one of
which is a terminal, the other being an opposition terminal. It can exist in
present
time where the pc is the terminal and what the pc is faced with is the
opposition
terminal. (HCOB 8 Nov 62) 7. is the read of the rock vs. the opposition
rock
and every pair above them on the cycle of the GPM. It marks the path to the
rock.
(HCOB 6 Dec 62) 8. is a convulsion of the mind and can reflect as a
convulsion
of the body. (HCOB 19 Sept 62) 9. the rock slam is called a rock
slam
because it is a needle manifestation which is achieved when the auditor is
approaching what we once called the rock. (SH Spec 190, 6209C18)
ROCK SLAM CHANNEL, 1. the pathway through the pairs of items that
compose a cycle of the GPM and lead to the rock and goal. (HCOB 6 Dec 62) 2.
that hypothetical course between a series of pairs consisting of terminals
and
opposition terminals. (HCOB 8 Nov 62)
ROCK SLAMMER, 1. a person is an R/Ser where R/Ses have to do with Scn or
one or more areas of the old Scn List One found in the Book of E-meter
Drills.
(HCOB 1 Nov 74) 2. a person who rock slams on Scn or auditors
or the like.
(HCOB 17 Oct 62) 3. it isn't somebody you can get a rock slam on,
you would
be wrong if you assumed that. It means it's somebody who gets a rock slam
when you ask them: “Consider overts against Scn” and that broadens out of
course against Ron, against the organization or against an auditor. (SH Spec
198,
6210C04)
ROCK SLAMMING LIST, things R/Sing when they were written down. One
rockslam on it at least. (SH Spec 225, 6212C13)
ROLLER-COASTER, 1. a case that betters and worsens. A roller-coaster is
always connected to a suppressive person and will not get steady gains until
the
suppressive is found on the case or the basic suppressive person earlier.
Because
the case doesn't get well he or she is a potential trouble source to us, to
others and
to himself. (HCOB 8 Nov 65) 2. a slump after a gain. Pcs who do not
hold their
gains are PTS. (HCOB 9 Dec 71RA) 3. gets better, gets worse, gets
better, gets
worse. (SH Spec 63, 6506C08)
ROLLER-COASTERING, the PTS is known by roller-coastering (Coney
Island fast up and down quarter-mile of aerial railway). They slump. (HCOB 3
Apr 66)
ROLLING A PHRASE, repeating or rolling a phrase in an engram in
order to
de-intensify the phrase or reduce the engram. This is not repeater
technique.
(SOS, Bk. 2, p. 68)
ROLLER COASTER CASE, Slang. a potential trouble source, and just on the
other
side of him there is a suppressive person invalidating his gains. He's never
going
to get any better, not until he is labeled a potential trouble source and
told to
handle. (SH Spec 61, 6505C18)
ROTE STYLE AUDITING, muzzled auditing or repetitive command auditing.
(HCOB 6 Nov 64)
ROUGH CASE, 1. no case gain. (HCO Exec Ltr, 3 May 65) 2 . unreality
case.
(HCOB 6 Dec 58)
ROUGH PC, the characteristic of the rough pc is not a pc's tendency
to ARC
break and scream but something much more subtle. The pc who makes no gain is
the pc who will not as-is, who will not confront, who can be audited forever
without cogniting on anything. The person whose “thought has no effect on
his
or her bank” he's been remarked on by me for years. This person is so
afraid to
find out that he or she will not permit anything to appear and therefore
nothing
will as-is, therefore, no cognition. (HCOB 15 Mar 62)
ROUTE 1, ROUTE 2, intensive procedure: outline in the use of this
procedure,
only two types of case are considered, and the procedure is adapted to these
two
types. The sole criteria of the case is whether or not it can be
exteriorized. This is
promptly established by the use of ARC straightwire. When there is no
noticeable
communication lag, then Route 1 is employed in this procedure. When
there is
any noticeable communication lag, Route 2 is employed. (COHA, p. 23)
[Route
1 and Route 2 are fully covered in Creation of Human Ability. ]
ROUTINE, a standard process, designed for the best steady gain of the pc
at that
level. (HCOB 11 Dec 64) Abbr. R
ROUTINE 1,1. is CCHs and Joburg security checks. (SH Spec 7, 6106C05) 2
.
applying control so as to get him into communication so that he can have. (SH
Spec 18, 6106C22)
ROUTINE 1A, 1. is simply familiarization with problems and getting off
the
fellow's withholds with security checks. (SH Spec 27, 6107C11) 2. any
combination
of processes which combines problems and security checks, and that
is all. ( SH Spec 27, 6107C11)
ROUTINE 1C, R-1C, consists of (1) finding something that moves the TA;
(2)
running the TA out of that subject to F/N, cog, VGIs. The usual method of
finding what to run in general R-lC is by assessment of dynamics. Assessment
by
dynamics gives a series of questions covering each of the dynamics. This is
assessed by tone arm as given in E-meter Drill 23. Take up the
reading question
by use of further questions on that same subject. (BTB 4 Dec 71R I)
ROUTINE 1CM, R-1CM, that's fishing with TA on the meter. It's picking up
the
things that blew down the meter while the guy was itsaing. It was actually a
specialized application of R-1C. (SH Spec 14, 6404C10)
ROUTINE 2, 1. is a general run of the Pre-hav scale, Joburg security
check, and the
havingness and confront processes all run in model session. (SH Spec 7,
6106C05) 2. getting out of the road the fixed reactive buttons which
prevent him
from having things. (SH Spec 18, 6106C22)
ROUTINE 2C, 1. R-2C Slow Assessment by Dynamics. This form is a
breakdown of the eight dynamics into areas where important itsa may be
developed. The stress of this assessment is on TA motion. (BTB 17 Oct 63R) 2.
a process which is discussion by lists. (SH Spec 14, 6404C10)
ROUTINE 2-G, a goal finding activity. (HCOB 13 Apr 63)
ROUTINE 2-G1, R2-G1 is a special goals prepcheck administered before a
goal is
found. This is a refined version of the problems intensive, slanted directly
at
goals. (HCOB 13 Apr 63)
ROUTINE 2-GPH, R2-GPH is a special goals prepcheck done by pre-hav levels
with a new assessment for each button. This is a refined use of the original
Routine 2. (HCOB 13 Apr 63)
ROUTINE 2-GX, is a goal finding routine consisting of the
nearly exact pattern
of a problems intensive but asking a different question, which adds up to
listing
times in the pc's life when his purpose was baulked and assessing and running
as
in a problems intensive. (HCOB 4 Mar 63, Urgent)
ROUTINE 2-GXl, is a goals intensive by prepcheck. (SH Spec 251, 6303C21)
ROUTINE 2-H, it is a very valuable unlimited process that undercuts
repetitive
processes and produces tone arm action on cases that have none on repetitive
processes. R2-H combines the most difficult steps of engram running, dating,
assessing, locating and indicating by-passed charge. It disposes of ARC
breaks.
(HCOB 25 Jun 63)
ROUTINE 2-10, (R2-12 short form for beginners). The short form of R2-12
can be
used by untrained auditors with some effect until they are trained in mid
ruds and
other niceties. (HCOB 5 Dec 62)
ROUTINE 2-12, 1. method of discharging the influence of a rock slamming
item is
actually taken from 3GA Criss Cross (3GAXX), and is a specialized routine
from Routine 3. We will, however, since it does not touch goals,
designate it as
Routine 2. (HCOB 23 Nov 62) 2. is simply an effort to locate one
of the GPM
items as it seems to be in present time to the pc. It's an effort to locate
that item in
present time and find its opposition. (SH Spec 218, 6211C27) 3. the
action of
Routine 2-12 is not the key-out of the pc's bank as in prepchecking but
the
actual eradication of those items which have been keyed in by present time
which
then and thereafter keep the pc in the grip of a present time problem. (SH
Spec
218, 6211C27) 4. is to put the case in condition so that it can show
progress
toward clearing and does actually progress the case toward clearing and
is a
clearing procedure. (SH Spec 218, 6211C27)
ROUTINE 2-12A, simply dropped out some unnecessary points in 2-12, threw
away tiger drilling and so forth. (SH Spec 236, 6302C12)
ROUTINE 2-16, Opening Procedure of 8-C. (COHA, p. 44)
ROUTINE 2-17, Opening Procedure by Duplication. (COHA, p. 47)
ROUTINE 3, 1. consists solely of finding a goal, then finding a terminal
that
matches the goal and running the terminal, and then finding another terminal
for
that goal, and another terminal for that goal, till that goal disappeared.
And then
finding that the goal had probably disappeared, and finding another goal, and
finding a terminal for that goal, and so on. And finding and auditing that
and then
finding another terminal and auditing that, and finally it disappeared. And
eventually you got into the situation where you'd find a goal and it would
blow
up and you'd find a terminal and it would blow up, and then you just couldn't
find anything, and you got a free needle. What you've done in essence was to
pick off a number of pieces of the goals problem mass so the pc was floating
free
of the goals problem mass. (SH Spec 139, 6204C26) 2. getting out of
the road
all these unrealized goals each one of which has been a defeat for him at
some
time or another, all of which goals had as their end product havingness. ( SH
Spec 18, 6106C22) 3. SOP goals assessment with a Joburg security
check. (SH
Spec 7, 6106C05)
ROUTINE 3A, 1. in R-3A you took the goal and the modifier and you found
the
terminal with goal and modifier. (SH Spec 139, 6204C26) 2. a way to
undercut
the speed of a goals terminal run. This consists of a discovery of a new
piece of
the puzzle-the modifier. By use of the modifier the basic terminal of a goals
chain may be isolated without running off the upper terminal. (HCOB 7 Nov 61)
ROUTINE 3D, 1. in Routine 3D you found the goal and the modifier and the
terminal and then the opposition terminal. (SH Spec 139, 6204C26) 2. in
3D
you're actually taking apart, from a distance, the component parts of the
goals
problem mass. (SH Spec 82, 6111C21) Abbr. R-3D.
ROUTINE 3D CRISS CROSS, 1. a process which addresses the goals problem
mass. (SH Spec 137, 6204C24) 2. why do we say criss cross? That's
just
because you go from one channel to the other channel, and then you go back to
the other channel. What do we mean by Channel? We mean what the pc has been
and what the pc has opposed. (SH Spec 202A, 6210C23) 3. earlier
version of
3GAXX. (LRH Def. Notes) Abbr. 3DXX.
ROUTINE 3D CRISS CROSS ITEMS, the items, the identities and the
beingnesses which the person has actually been. Don't call them so much a
beingness as an identity. They are a package of conduct, they are a package
of
training patterns and so forth, which are residual from that particular life.
(SH
Spec 116, 6202C27)
ROUTINE-3G, Routine Three employing goals. (SH Spec 141, 6205C01)
ROUTINE 3 GA CRISS CROSS, see THREE GA XX.
ROUTINE 3H, R-3H, ARC break process (R-4H renamed R-3H). (HCOB 22 Sept
65)
ROUTINE 3M, R3M is a clearing technique. (HCOB 22 Feb 63)
ROUTINE 3-MX, is called X because it's still experimental and
therefore its
designation is really Routine 3M. (SH Spec 235, 6302C07).
ROUTINE
3-N, R3N is a stripped down directive Routine Three which uses line
plots. (SH Spec 263, 6305C14)
ROUTINE 3N2, R3N2 is an abbreviated form of
R3N. (SH Spec 266,
6305C21)
ROUTINE 3-R, 1. R3R Engram Running by Chains is designated “Routine
3-
R” to fit in with other modern processes. (HCOB 24 Jun 63) 2.
Routine 3
Revised. (BTB 20 Aug 71R II)
ROUTINE 3-SC, 1. Routine Three, Service Facsimile Clear. (HCOB 1
Sept 63) 2. in R3SC you are only trying to end the compulsive
character of the
service facsimile so found and get it off automatic and get the pc to see it
better.
(HCOB 1 Sept 63)
ROUTINE 4-H, R4H, Routine Four. Process used to relieve ARC breaks.
(HCOB 23 Aug 65)
ROUTINE 4-SC, R4SC, Routine Four. Process used to locate and run service
facsimiles. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)
ROUTINE 6 END WORDS (R6EW), when the pc has taken the locks off the
reactive mind itself, using R6EW, he attains Fourth Stage Release. (HCOB 30
Aug 65) [Grade VI Release]
RR, rocket read-type of meter read. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)
R/S, rock slam, type of meter read. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)
R/Ser, see ROCK SLAMMER.
R/S HANDLING, also called the Responsibility RD, is done as OCA
right-hand
side handling. A list of all R/Sing statements is made, then each
taken up. The
idea is an R/S will occur in connection with a terminal which will read when
checked and that's what you want to run. (HCOB 28 Mar 74, Expanded Dianetics
Series No. 21)
RSM, “Royal Scotman”. (FO 1483) [The Flagship's name before it became
the
“Apollo”]
R/S PC, RSes=psychosis=succumb, is trying to die (evil purpose) and the
auditor is
trying to make him live. This gives you an
intention-counter-intention=problem,
so all such pcs are problems to audit. (BTB 30 Aug 72 II)
R/S STATEMENTS, statements which the pc said that R/Sed when he said it.
(BTB 8 Nov 72R II)
R6, 1. Routine Six. (HCOB 23 Aug 65) abbreviation for Routine
6. It means
the exact processes and aspects of case handled at Level VI of Scn.
(BTB 12
Apr 72R)
R6 BANK, the reactive mind. (HCOB 12 Jul 65)
R6EW, Routine 6 End Words. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)
R6-EW P, Routine 6 End Word Plot. (HCOB 4 Jan 65)
R6-EW S, Routine 6 End Word Sixes. (HCOB 4 Jan 65)
R6 GPMI, Routine Six Running GPMs by Items. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)
R6O, Routine Six Original Bank. (HCOB 23 Aug 65).
R6R, Routine 6 Review
of all bank run. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)
RUDIMENTS, 1. setting the case up for the session action. This includes
ARC
breaks, PTPs, W/Hs, GF or O/R listing or any prepared list. (HCOB 23 Aug 71)
2. the rudiments apply to present time and this universe now.
They are a
nowness series of processes. (SH Spec 31, 6205C13) 3. a rudiment is
that
which is used to get the pc in shape to be audited that session. (SH Spec
147,
6205C17) 4. the reason you use and clean rudiments is to get
the pc in session
so you can have the pc (1) in communication with the auditor and (2)
interested in
own case. The purpose of rudiments is to set up a case to run, not to
run a case.
(HCOB 19 May 61)
RUDS, rudiments. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)
RUN, undergo processing. (SOS, p. 75)
RUNDOWN, a series of steps which are auditing actions and processes
designed to
handle a specific aspect of a case and which have a known end phenomena.
Example: Introspection Rundown. (LRH Def. Notes)
RUN OUT, erase. (FOT, p. 95).