6106C22 SHSpec-18 Running CCH's The way the CCH's are run is 1, 2, 3, 4 over and over and over. It is a breach of the auditor's code, clause 13, to run a process beyond the point where it is producing change or to stop running one which is producing change. The words in the process have very little to do with the process; they're run with meat and motion. They are all done by compulsion if necessary. The PC never has an opportunity not to execute the command. The consequences of letting a PC out of doing the command are grave. The CCH's run out surgery, shock, etc., as the PC dramatizes. You should run the process flat, which means the PC has the same aspect for twenty minutes, no matter what the aspect is, and no matter how nutty or unconscious (as long as the PC is doing the command). Change means such things as somatics, etc. It may be necessary to run CCH's for a few hours before they bite. You don't pay attention to what the PC says; it's what he does, though if he communicates to you that something is happening, that's a change. Running CCH's permissively will also screw up the PC; you must apply control to get communication and communication to get control. Irresponsibility denies havingness, so sec checks also raise havingness. All O/W running, since it raises responsibility, results in havingness. "Prehav" really means "prevent havingness" scale. It consists of those things that prevent havingness. This is gotten off in Routine 2 [see p. 34 or HCOB 5Jun61]: the fixed reactive buttons that prevent the PC from having things are gotten out of the road. On Routine 3, the PC gets out of the road all those unrealized goals, each of which has been a defeat, hence a denial of havingness. So havingness is the end product of all this. O/W raises havingness because the individual individuates from things because he can't have them. So he develops overts only on those things he can't have. So when you get the overts off, he can have. If you could have the whole universe, it gives you no trouble. It's only the things you can't have that you have trouble with. Next time you have a PTP, see what's in it and what prevents you from having them. Individuation from the thing, the dynamic, the universe, is what brings trouble, because you get into an obsessive games condition, which adds up to -- you can't have it and it can't have anything to do with you. The CCH's knock out individuation from the physical beingness which has been caused from the PC to his body and (apparently) his body to him. That's why they run out electric shocks, etc. And you have to let him take more responsibility or he won't improve his havingness. You have to maintain control, or you'll show him the body can't be controlled, so it can continue to overwhelm the PC. Also, the PC will become practically unauditable. Misguided kindness is all that could let you allow the PC to control the session. It's actually a vicious thing to do. Even if the PC is right in his advice, don't follow it. He'll gain more from being run wrong, but under your control, than right under his own. If you're going to err, err on the side of control and toughness, not sweetness and light. It's better to end the process wrongly on the auditor's determinism than to end it rightly on the PC's. If you let the PC take control, you're very liable to get an ARC break a half hour later. You may not notice that it's because you lost control, because of the lag. But the way to handle it is to spot the point where you lost control and reassert it. If the auditor is in control of the session, auditing takes place; if the auditor is not in control of the session, reactivity takes place. If you flinch from auditing, it's from those times when you didn't control the session and came under attack as a result.