not-isness: the effort to create out of existence, by postulate or force, something which one knows, priorly, exists. For more information, see the Axioms of Scientology in the book Scientology 0-8: The Book of Basics, by L. Ron Hubbard. It is not destroy-create, because create is not a not-isness and it's not an alter-isness, is it? —Help—How to Get Started (7 Feb. 58) Objective Process: one of the Objective Processes, Scientology processes which help a person to look or place his attention outward from himself. Objective refers to outward things, not the thoughts or feelings of the individual. Objective Processes deal with the real and observable. They call for the person to spot or find something exterior to himself in order to carry out the
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procedures. Objective Processes locate the person in his environment, establish direct communication, and bring a person to present time. There are six different things or approaches. Like an Objective Process. —Other Processes, the Help Button (13 Feb. 58)
1.5: the numerical designation for anger on the Tone Scale. See also Tone Scale in this glossary. The guy's idea of a calm conversation was a high 1.5 scream.
— Other Processes, the Help Button (13 Feb. 58)
one-shot Clear: a single phrase or action given once, or repeated, which would bring into being the Clear as described in Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health. And it could be said that if an individual could be reassured sufficiently concerning the survival of his possessions, that he would be Clear instantly and at once, and that is probably the only one-shot Clear there is.
— The Key Processes of Clearing (11 Feb. 58)
Operating Thetan: a state of beingness. It is a being "at cause over matter, energy, space, time, form and life." Operating comes from "able to operate without dependency on things," and thetan is the Greek letter theta (Θ), which the Greeks used to represent thought or perhaps spirit, to which an n is added to make a noun in the modern style used to create words in engineering. It is also Θn or "theta to the nth degree," meaning unlimited or vast. You have a definite end product in Operating Thetan and you have a way-stop on the matter of Clear. —Help—How to Get Started (7 Feb. 58)
OT: abbreviation for Operating Thetan. See also Operating Thetan in this glossary. By the way, we're going to organize a society one of these days, out of OTs, a society for the rehabilitation of a constitutional government. —Help — How to Get Started (7 Feb. 58)
overrunning: continuing an auditing process or a series of processes past the point of completion. And if you're having difficulty, it's because you're overrunning a part of the bracket. — The Key Processes of Clearing: Question and Answer Period (11 Feb. 58)
PAB: abbreviation for Professional Auditor's Bulletin, one of a series of issues written by L. Ron Hubbard between 10 May 53 and 1 April 59. The content of these bulletins was technical and promotional. Their intent was to give the professional auditor and his preclears the best possible processes and processing available at the moment it became available. The last and most effective Group Process that came out was issued in a PAB. —How to Get Started: Question and Answer Period (7 Feb. 58)
Pavlov: Ivan Petrovich Pavlov (1849-1936), Russian physiologist. Noted for behavioral experiments in which he sounded a bell while presenting food to a dog, thereby stimulating the natural flow of saliva in the dog's mouth. After the procedure was repeated several times, the dog would salivate at the sound of the bell, even when no food was presented. The mind is too complicated, perhaps, for Wundt, Pavlov, psychologists, psychiatrists and so forth, but in actuality it was too simple for them. — The Key Processes of Clearing (11 Feb. 58)
peke: short for Pekingnese, one of a Chinese breed of small dogs having a long, silky coat. You see some of these old ladies going down the street with a peke, you know the dog has gotten up to the level of deification and will soon cave in as a malevolent object that we must rid the society of because it is so bad. —Help—How to Get Started (7 Feb. 58)
picnic: (colloquial) an awkward adventure, an unpleasant experience, a troublesome job. You start just clearing the word help in the auditing command and you're liable to have a picnic. —How to Get Started: Question and Answer Period (7 Feb. 58)
pinaner: a coined word meaning piano. He's a pianist and he plays the pinaner. —Havingness, Anaten, Flows in Relation to Clearing (12 Feb. 58)
poozle: a coined word meaning "puzzle." This is a big—a big "poozle." I don't know what you want with anything. —Havingness, Anaten, Flows in Relation to Clearing: Question and Answer Period (12 Feb. 58)
GLOSSARY
Popeye: a comic strip character created by E. C. Segar (1894-1938) in 1929. In 1933, an animated cartoon series was released starring Popeye. His enemy, Bluto, would seemingly manage to defeat him, but Popeye would always spring back to victory after eating a can of spinach. It is what it is, it is not something else—like Popeye. —Help—How to Get Started (7 Feb. 58)
postulate: a conclusion, decision or resolution to resolve a problem or set a pattern for the future or to nullify a pattern of the past. We trace down in vain to discover any other (below the level of postulate)—but any other electrical phenomenon that generates current, except the base of the motor, the ability to hold two terminals apart and to cause a discharge between those two terminals. — Conduct of Clear (10 Feb. 58)
preclear: a person not yet Clear, hence pre-Clear; generally, a person being audited, who is thus on the road to Clear; a person who, through processing, is finding out more about himself and life. See also Clear in this glossary. Now, auditors up to this time have had policing criteria as to whether or not they were getting results above and beyond the preclear's opinion and, to some degree, beyond their own opinion. —Help—How to Get Started (7 Feb. 58)
present time problem: a special problem that exists in the physical universe "now" on which the pc has his attention fixed. It is any set of circumstances that so engages the attention of the preclear that he feels he should be doing something about it instead of being audited. The person has just had hell raised with every quarter of his life in the last few years; he's just appetite over tin cup one way or the other; got so many present time problems at the moment that he couldn't possibly sit still even if he were outside somewhere. —Help — How to Get Started (7 Feb. 58)
Problem of Comparable Magnitude: a process for a preclear who is worried about a present time situation or problem. The auditor, with a very brief discussion of the problem, asks the preclear "to invent a problem of comparable magnitude." The preclear is made to invent problem after problem until he is no longer concerned with his present time problem. And you run Problem of Comparable Magnitude or What Part of That Problem Could You Be Responsible For? or Invent Something Worse Than That Problem. —Help — How to Get Started (7 Feb. 58)
process: same as auditing. See auditing in this glossary. Well, oddly enough, it's a sufficiently powerful process, even though it doesn't result in a Clear. —Help—How to Get Started (7 Feb. 58)
profile: a specially prepared graph which plots ten traits of a person's character based upon a personality test administered to him. A pack of profiles come in, and I look these over and I see where goofing is occurring from an ACC; I see where people are sliding or see some specialized piece of information they need. —Responsibility for Mock-ups: Question and Answer Period (14 Feb. 58)
Prudential Life: short for Prudential Life Insurance, the name of a major life and health insurance company in the US. There is no such thing, whether it's Prudential Life or anything else, as an organization which is then something. —Responsibility for Mock-Ups (14 Feb. 58)
psychosomatic: a term used in common parlance to denote conditions "resulting from a state of mind." Such illnesses account for about 70 percent of all ills, by popular report. You can run a nine-way bracket easily with a person; you can run it less easily with a psychosomatic. —Conduct of Clear: Question and Answer Period (10 Feb. 58)
PT: abbreviation for present time. You couldn't even tell if he had a PT problem. —Help—How to Get Started (7 Feb. 58)
Pure Food and Drug Administration: humorous reference to the Food and Drug Administration, the agency of the US federal government authorized by Congress to inspect, test, approve and set safety standards for foods and food additives, drugs, chemicals, cosmetics and household and medical devices. Their stated purpose is to protect the public against impure and unsafe foods,
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drugs and cosmetics. Their branch office down here, the Pure Food and Drug Administration, makes sure that they're kept solvent. They can advertise cures, no matter how specious. —Other Processes, the Help Button (13 Feb. 58)
Q and A: short for Question and Answer. It means to not get an answer to one's question, to fail to complete something or to deviate from an intended course of action. Example: Question: "Do birds fly?" Answer: "I don't like birds." Question: "Why not?" Answer: "Because they're dirty." The original question has not been answered and has been dropped and the person who asked the question has deviated—this is Q and A. The person who deviates could be said to have "Q-and-Aed." There's no condemnation of him. He's just fallen for the Q and A. —The Key Processes of Clearing (11 Feb. 58)
randomity: a consideration of motion. We have plus randomity and we have minus randomity. We can have, from the individual's consideration, too much or too little motion, or enough motion. What's enough motion measured by? The consideration of the individual. The term randomity is often used to mean simply too much motion or action. And you ran into some randomity about fields, and I said there were more ways to clear fields than I knew how to count. —Help—How to Get Started (7 Feb. 58)
reactive bank: same as reactive mind. See reactive mind in this glossary. And the worst part of the mind is what we used to call the "reactive bank" or the "reactive mind" in Dianetics. —Help—How to Get Started (7 Feb. 58)
reactive mind: that 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. The reactive mind is where engrams (recordings of experiences containing pain, unconsciousness and a real or fancied threat to survival) are stored. And the worst part of the mind is what we used to call the "reactive bank" or the "reactive mind" in Dianetics. —Help—How to Get Started (7 Feb. 58)
read: a positive reaction on the E-Meter. The auditor for about the first five, six hours of the session hadn't gotten a read yet. —Help—How to Get Started (7 Feb. 58)
Reality Scale: a scale of degrees of reality, beginning at the bottom with solid communication lines, then moving up through masses, agreements and considerations to postulates at the top. Now, we have the Reality Scale. And it goes as follows, from the top to the bottom—a scale which is very important. —Havingness, Anaten, Flows in Relation to Clearing (12 Feb. 58)
Registrar: the staff member in a Church of Scientology organization who enlightens individuals about Dianetics and Scientology services and signs them up for training and auditing. Registrar says, "Well, what do you want to do in this week?" — The Key Processes of Clearing: Question and Answer Period (11 Feb. 58)
Release: at the time of these lectures, an individual whose personality test averaged a third of a graph higher than his first test, and who had an IQ of above 115 as a result of having received Scientology processing. By the way, its payoff starts to fade out when you get in the range of Release or something like that—I mean, its payoff flattens. —The Key Processes of Clearing (11 Feb. 58)
Remedy of Havingness: a Scientology auditing process that has a preclear mock up a mass in front of him and shove it into his body, and mock up another mass in front of him and throw it away, over and over. When the process has been done thoroughly and completely, the preclear should be able to reject or accept, at his own discretion, anything in his environment as well as anything in his engram bank. Male voice: First question was subjective Repair or Remedy of Havingness. —Conduct of Clear: Question and Answer Period (10 Feb. 58)
Repair of Havingness: a process in which the auditor had the preclear mock up anything he could and shove that mock-up into the body. It was a one-way flow, an inflow. The process was used to give the preclear havingness when his
GLOSSARY
attention dropped or he became agitated. Male voice: First question was subjective Repair or Remedy of Havingness. —Conduct of Clear: Question and Answer Period (10 Feb. 58)
restimulation: reactivation of a past memory due to similar circumstances in the present approximating circumstances of the past. Well, this is a reactive mind in full restimulation. —Help—How to Get Started (7 Feb. 58)
Rhinesque: having qualities like those of Joseph Banks Rhine (1895-1980), American psychologist. As head of the laboratory of parapsychology at Duke University, in Durham, North Carolina, he investigated extrasensory perception and tried to find scientific explanations for "supernatural" occurrences, e.g., telepathy, etc. No reason for him to be upset to this degree every time he finds out that he can touch something extrasensorily. Now, when we say extrasensorily we do not mean Rhinesque doodle-dads. —Conduct of Clear (10 Feb. 58)
ridge: a solid accumulation of old, inactive energy suspended in space and time. A ridge is generated by opposing energy flows which hit one another, and continues to exist long after the energy flows have ceased. It's just a mass of ridges filled full of facsimiles, and he's keeping it all mocked up very neatly and very nicely. —Help—How to Get Started (7 Feb. 58)
Rising Scale Processing: a process in which one takes any point or column of the Chart of Attitudes (the chart which shows the attitudes toward life taken by people, and comes with the book Handbook for Preclears) which the preclear can reach, and asks the preclear then to shift his postulate upwards toward a higher level. It 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" (attitudes toward life) on the Chart of Attitudes. Ever hear of Rising Scale Processing? —Conduct of Clear: Question and Answer Period (10 Feb. 58)
run so fast that he stands still: reference to a line from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and Through the Looking-Glass (1871), two stories written by Lewis Carroll (1832-1898) about a little girl named Alice who has a series of remarkable adventures with several characters in strange countries where very illogical things happen. At one point one of the characters, the Red Queen, says, "Now, here, you see, it takes all the running you can do, to keep in the same place. If you want to get somewhere else, you must run at least twice as fast as that!" He's a fellow who has to run so fast that he stands still. —Help— How to Get Started (7 Feb. 58)
saint: reference to Saint Francis of Assisi (ca. 1182-1286), Italian monk and teacher, popularly associated with reverence for animals as part of God's creation. He is often depicted preaching to birds. But they had a saint, there, that could make the birds sing on every side or shut up or come around or go away and was very good with animals. —Help—How to Get Started (7 Feb. 58)
"S" and double triangle: the symbol of Scientology consisting of two triangles over which an "S" is imposed. The "S" stands for Scientology, the top triangle is the KRC triangle (standing for knowledge, responsibility and control) and the bottom one is the ARC triangle (standing for affinity, reality and communication). For more information, read Chapter 2 of Scientology 0-8: The Book of Basics by L. Ron Hubbard. The top face of the disk on this identification bracelet has the "S" and double triangle, of which you're all familiar, embossed. —Responsibility for Mock-Ups (14 Feb. 58)
Scientologist: one who knows he has found the way to a better life through Scientology and who, through Scientology books, tapes, training and processing is actively attaining it. It never occurs to you to play the other side of the game though: Let the dog hit your paws. Scientologist, it would, of course. —Help — How to Get Started (7 Feb. 58)
Scientology: Scientology philosophy. It is the study and handling of the spirit in relationship to itself, universes and other life. Scientology means scio, knowing
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