22 Aug 97
superandrew@tripod.net wrote:
> Dear friends, i am a class v graduated auditor who was on staff on an > earth church and got fed up of being treated bad from seniors , > getting no auditing, low income, high working hours ; i figured out > that by devoting all my forces to the church i will be committing an > overt on 1d 2d 5d 6d 7d. > Now i don't have a freezone auditor in my country so i am attempting > to go through grade2 to the top alone, by solo auditing me, do you > have any suggestions or can you give me any help ? > much love, > littleLRH
Good for you.
I have managed to run grades style processes on myself solo. But it is difficult. You need a high level of skill
and enough persistance to flatten the process. This is probably out of reach for people who are not trained auditors.
I have been thinking a lot about how to do a mostly solo bridge.
It is easier with more narrowly focused commands that can be answered more easily and will flatten faster. And
it helps to boost the person's posative side a bit more so that they retain enough horsepower as the process brings
things into restimulation.
With this in mind, lets take a look at the key process for Grade 2 which is "What have you done", "What
haven't you said".
First of all, we are addressing two targets rather than one. It would be better to deal with done and withheld
doingness separately from hiding what one has done.
So let us use "what have you done", "what have you kept yourself from doing" as our first process.
Then we could use "What have you let others find out" alternated with "what have you kept hidden"
as our second category of process.
But we should also narrow the target, so we might do this by dynamics.
Each is run alternately to EP.
1.1a) What have you done with your body
1.1b) What have you kept yourself from doing with your body
1.2a) What has another done with their body
1.2b) What has another kept themselves from doing with their body
1.3a) What have others done with their bodies
1.3b) What have others kept themselves from doing with their bodies
2.1a) What have you done with sex
2.1b) What have you kept yourself from doing with sex
(other flows as above)
3.1a) What have you done with children
3.2b) What have you kept yourself from doing with children
(other flows as above)
4.1a) What have you done with loved ones
4.2b) What have you kept yourself from doing with loved ones
(other flows as above)
And so on, including things such as work, groups, governments, society, animals, life forms, objects, energy, space,
time, spirits, (entities if appropriate), religion, god, infinity, ethics, asthetics, knowlege, games, creation.
Note that done does not mean committed an overt. It just means done. Overts are allowed to come up if they need
to, but do not have to be searched for.
Then one could run
1a) What have you let others find out about your body
1b) What have you kept hidden about your body
And continue on through the same pattern of processes as above.
I know its a lot of processes, but most of these could probably release in a few commands and the whole set (maybe
144 processes) can probably be run in a half dozen hours solo.
My gut feeling was to use 3 flows on this rather than four. The first flow here is mostly causative and pretty
much flow zero as well as allowing for flow 1.
This might run well with only two flows (self and others) because of the similarity between another and others.
Running things by dynamics is to a great degree a sort of super bracket anyway and is less likely to give trouble
due to unrun flows.
And our real target here is one's own causation and awareness of other's causation.
This is, of course, highly experimental. So use your judgement as to what else might be needed. Other flows, buttons,
and command wordings are possible. But the above should take one hell of a lot of charge off of grade 2.
Please post your experiences with doing a solo bridge as you work your way up the chart. I think that mostly solo,
with review and booster rundowns from professionals, would be the fastest way to set everyone free.
Good Luck,
The Pilot