6203C27 SHSpec-130 Prepchecking Data [Details on correction of errors in prepchecking.] A PC doesn't prepcheck all the way to the bottom of the deck; not all levels of pcs prepcheck. Prepchecking is not as broadly good an approach to all cases, no matter how low-toned, as the CCH's or even 3DXX. Both CCH's and 3DXX go much farther south than prepchecking, which requires some responsibility for thinkingness. Thus: 1. Prepchecking takes responsibility for doingness. 2. 3DXX takes responsibility for existingness (beingness). 3. CCH's take some responsibility for mass and repetitive action (havingness). Note that this is a be, do, have situation. 3DXX and CCH's both go further south than responsibility for doingness, which is what prepchecking attacks. It is odd that the beingness processes (3DXX) go further south than doingness, but it is empirically true that this is the case. The reason fur this is probably that doingness is the main punishment factor in this part of the universe. One will admit to beingness and havingness before admitting to doingness. If you are having a lot of trouble with prepchecking; if you are not making much gain; if you have tried for several sessions to find an area that produces TA without success, you should run CCH's. The problem is not necessarily the PC; it could be lack of auditor skill. But in any case, CCH's will give the PC more case gain and more auditing. It could be that the auditor is timid or that the PC is new and the auditor doesn't want to upset or embarrass him, or the PC may be in the middle of a PTP of long duration that is undisclosed. The CCH's will discharge PTP's of long duration, even if they are undisclosed. Or the PC's moral code could be so different from the auditor's, so far out-of this world, that the auditor misses the boat on it. Or the PC could have no confidence in the auditor's prepchecking. Or the PC has insufficient responsibility to respond to any doingness. That will be handled with CCH's. CCH-2 is less embarrassing to start a new PC with than prepchecking, also. After an intensive of CCH's, the same things that didn't produce TA before will now give TA. The only thing that breaks an auditor's heart is getting nothing done, so don't abandon responsibility for yourself by running things which get nothing done. Most auditor errors are from not flattening processes. LRH doesn't care what you run on a PC as long as you flatten it and as long as you get results. If you are getting TA on something, run it. However, running limited processes beyond the point where they stop producing TA is a hazardous operation. Pcs sometimes get off lies and feel relieved. That is just because you didn't get near their overts. You should know how to crack the problem of social mores. In 3DXX, you get the terminal's social mores by asking the PC what would be considered anti-social by the terminal. You then use the mores to make up zero questions, using the overt with the biggest meter reaction first. You are liable to come up with the PC's oppterm and overts of failure to damage the oppterm pretty quickly. So you have to find out if it is a "plus overt" or a "minus overt", i.e., whether it is what you would expect or whether it is from the other side of the fence. Every race, every species, having a fourth dynamic, tends to fixate on that dynamic, and the thetans running those bodies tend to keep running those bodies as long as they are available. But when the species got scarce or extinct, they had to move over into something else. There is no reason you shouldn't have been an animal at one time or another. It is actually quite a relief. You pick up your now-I'm-supposed-to's easily. Animals tend to stay with their now-I'm-supposed-to's because they can't talk about them. That is the only thing wrong with [being an animal]. As far as nationalities are concerned, thetan transfer can really scramble things up. Say some Indian gets a new body as an Englishman; the U.S. is now getting lots of ex-Nazi's, ex-Japanese, etc. On the track, the PC has often gone round and round on the Greece-Egypt-Persia line, getting all confused about his now-I'm-supposed-to's. However, there is a dominant moral code in the 3DXX package. Don't forget overts of omission as well as commission, plus the fruitful area of make-guilty and being a victim. You could investigate the make-guilty aspect of any zero question to get his efforts to get a motivator on the subject which would make someone else guilty of the overt. If the PC tends to dodge into past lives to avoid his this-life overts, when you get in end-ruds about half-truths, untruths, misses withholds, etc., you will pick up the avoided areas. Some pcs need a lot of clean-up on half-truths all the time; others don't. You will get to know the PC and see if it is necessary. Don't use any form of O/W to handle ruds in prepcheck sessions or you will pile up unflat chains, and the PC will use ruds to avoid uncomfortable hot areas.