6411C17 SHSpec-47 "Styles of Auditing" [Reference: HCOB 6Nov64 "Styles of Auditing".] Getting the different auditing styles clarified and formalized will make learning to audit easier. Over the years, many auditing styles have developed to deliver different processes. Repetitive commands came in in 1955-56, along with TR's. Muzzled auditing followed, to handle auditors who messed up PCs with interruptions, comments, etc. More recently, with LRH's work on the comm cycle and the discovery that auditors weren't really listening, listen style was developed. For prepchecking and sec checking, where you steer the PC around, another style was developed: guiding style. Now that we have all the processes, all the styles are there, in order of developing an auditor's skill, as he goes up the levels. The higher you go, the more precise your auditing is, but also the higher you go, the more sloppy your auditing may look. At the level of R6, the PC is going through so much and changing so fast that the auditor has to be able to shift and change rapidly in order to keep up with the PC and his mind, and in order to do just what is necessary to keep the PC running down the bank. A PC has to be up aways to be able to have all-style auditing. For the PC to be up to standing all-style auditing would require a high level of confidence in auditors and acquaintance with different styles of auditing. So the unpredictability of all-style auditing would throw the PC off, if this was the first style he had encountered. Auditing the PC at lower levels would give him more certainty. If you ran R6 on raw meat, you might get away with it, but the first mess you got into would be the end of the PC. He's got no confidence in auditing and no reliance on scientology's ability to handle PTP's, to fix him or rescue him, etc. There is a case factor also preventing a new PC from being audited on R6. The worse off someone is, the more "important" he is and the more exaggerated his ideas of his ability are. He's got hidden standards, out-confront, etc., etc. There isn't much you could do if you put the PC on R6 and he spun, so don't do it. You are making yourself the effect of his bank. Most people start their auditing in total desperation, in fear of going out the bottom. Getting up to the point where they know that they won't get any worse (Release) is a major improvement. It doesn't necessarily take a long time to do this. You might tend to overrun the PC unless you observe well and note the acceleration of gain that occurs. Don't cut off PC cogs. Furthermore, you are handling a level of case that is voluntarily trying to improve, which means that there is some spark of responsibility for self-improvement and some idea that the person can do something about it. People can go so far downscale that they think nothing can be done about anything. Then you get a socialist or a communist state to take care of them. One reason why governments call scientology a fake is that they have the opinion that nothing can be done, [and scientology is claiming that it can do something]. Through a PC's course of auditing, we must keep the PC winning so that "self at cause" keeps coming up. It is easier to make someone better than to make him worse. He resists getting worse but doesn't resist getting better. When he realizes that he can and must do something to get better, and that he will not get worse, be will be a Release. The auditing styles can be plotted against the most likely win for the PC at a given stage of his auditing. How you audit a PC is at least as important as what you audit. Just the mechanics of auditing are therapeutic, regardless of the process they are applied to. First the PC discovers that he can talk to someone. Then he discovers that he can answer a question when he is asked one. there is some 8C in this that is beneficial, as well as duplication, which he has fallen away from. He can't be anything, because he can't duplicate anything. Unless you have gotten someone out of this kind of condition, he can't confront existence. A thetan can only be what he can see. He can only see what he can duplicate. It is hard to get duplication of an accident or a crime, because a person can't be it. Therefore, he can't see it. This leads to a "slight occupational liability as an auditor. You are looking at a PC, all the time, that you don't particularly want to be. You're trying to improve him, aren't you?! Fortunately, it isn't necessary for you to be willing to be aberrated, to get well," because we have the whole anatomy of the reactive bank, and there is no sense in it. If the PC hadn't made the reactive mind and the GPM's, he would be virtually unaberratable. There would be no dwindling spiral, because the thetan would have to determine to have something wrong with him. A thetan had to decide to be aberrated. He did it, but almost accidentally. Having done it, he was too stupid to get out of his trap. There are different degrees of aberration, based on the locks and the tendency of the reactive mind to group, bunch up, and get into restimulation. There are some basic things that can go wrong with a thetan, which are above the level of the bank and GPM's. These include duplication and communication. Duplication and communication can be aberrated, regardless of end-words. There are end-words there too, but these are high-level ideas common to all thetans, with or without banks. A PC should be able to communicate and duplicate pretty well. They do improve, up to the point where he can confront his bank. At Level 0, the PC knows that he has communicated because the auditor received the communication. At Level I, the PC knows he has received a communication, because he has answered it and the auditor is satisfied with the fact that he has answered the communication. If the auditor lets the PC receive a communication or question that he doesn't answer, the PC is unsatisfied, because, knowing that he didn't answer the question, he starts doubting his ability to receive a communication. At this level, he finds that not only can he answer a question, but also he can answer it repetitively. This is a big change for many people. When a PC can answer a question repetitively that is even better than just being able to answer a question. That is why we say, "I will repeat the auditing command." [See Abridged Style below.] Guiding style. At this level, we are handling the PC's finding out that there is something there. To the PC, the whole world is reasonless. He is starting out at a lower harmonic of the truth, namely that there is nothing there and that he has no reason to be upset about anything. He says, "I feel nervous today," and sees no cause for it. The biggest cog here is that there are causes for things. For one thing, he will realize that he is not just natively stupid or that life doesn't have to be a mess. Something could be causing the condition he is in. The PC needs to get the idea that conditions don't just happen, but are caused by things, and that be is "no longer just a pawn. If things cause things, you might be able to predict. If things cause things, you might be able to do something about something. If things cause things, you might be able to do something about yourself!!!" Guiding Secondary Style. This comes out of guiding style auditing. Steer plus itsa is the process that goes with it. You find it and bleed it (Remedy A and B). Level II locates causes. Without knowing the cause, a person is dispersed all over the universe. Finding the cause, and then doing something about it, is terrific. Abridged style. When he has learned all that, it is safe to run him on an abridged style. We can look and see what is going on. The reason why, at Levels I and II, you always say, "I'll repeat the auditing question," when the PC hasn't answered it is that you are teaching the PC that he can receive and answer an auditing question. At Level III, this is not necessary anymore, and it may be irritating to the PC. He already knows that he can get the command. So you have abridged style, in which the auditor and the PC can look and see what is going on. This is an abridgement of lower, not upper styles. The PC says he has a PTP. You don't guide him into it. You just ask, "What is it?" It usually blows, so you then drop it. The PC can as-is things more easily now. You audit purely against a finite result to the point of getting to happen what you want to have happen and no further. The PC learns that when he gets audited, something happens. Direct style. Now we've got direct style auditing. Getting the exact result applies even more, here. You go direct to the result.