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Nov. 1997
IVy
34
3
Another Look at Basics: ft 15
On Havingness
by Frank Gordon, USA
THE EARLIEST MENTION of havingness as a
process is in "SOP-8C: The Rehabilitation of the
Human Spirit," under Step IV: Havingness:
"Formula IV:(b) As the pc has rendered auto-
matic his desires and his ability to create and
destroy, and has thus placed havingness beyond
his control, the auditor should place in the con-
trol of the pc his automaticities of havingness
and unhavingness and permit him, on his own
self determinism, to balance his havingness."
(Tech. Vol.
II, p. 14).
Ron does not give a direct question to balance one's
havingness but this might be done by asking:
"What would you like to have more (or less) of?"
Ron then goes on to describe a subjective proc-
ess wherein the PC creates 8 anchor points and
pulls (later shoves) them into himself and re-
tains the mass. This later became two proc-
esses: the Remedy of Havingness, (shoving in
and throwing away mock-ups), and the Repair
of Havingness (just shoving mockups in).
Havingness and the reality scale
In PAB 123,
Tech. Vol.
Ill, p. 141, "The Reality
Scale," havingness is defined as:
"Reality contains a level known as Havingness.
In this little band of Mass there is a scale inside
the Reality Scale -- the Havingness Scale. And
that has to do with the consideration of mass.
It's what you
do
with mass."
"So the Havingness Scale .. consists of the doingness
with regard to mass. And they begin
at the top with Create, go down at once into
Contribute to, into Confront, into Have, into
Waste, and on down into Substitute. That all
belongs at Mass; these are all the things you do
with mass."
Havingness as "what you do with mass," could
then lead into
use,
mis -- use, dis-use, waste,
squander, enhance, collect, disperse, play with,
save, lose, enjoy, protect, admire, etc

And these actions could then be seen as a kind
of pre-have scale with respect to the definition
above, that is, "havingness is what you do with
mass," until you don't need to do anything with
it except simply
have
it.
Other havingness definitions
There are a number of other definitions, includ-
ing havingness as a kind of complicated con-
nectedness, that which permits the experience
of mass and pressure, and the concept of being
able to reach.
Havingness and IQ
In HCOB 9 Sept. 57,
Tech. Vol.
Ill, p. 118, there is
an observation about IQ, related to havingness:
"IQ is the ability to withhold or give out a datum
on a self-determined basis."
This implies that any forced or pressured
communication, which interferes with the
self-determinism of the pc, would reduce IQ.
And security checking could be viewed as spotting
areas of "must tell," or "must not tell." In either
case, there has been an interruption of self-
determinism.
The auditor might approach this by: "Think of
something," and "Decide whether you wish to
tell me about it or not."
Another way of looking at havingness in terms
of the cycle of be, do, have, is th at usually
have
is the end-point of a cycle of action, a kind of
natural stop or resting point.
The importance of havingness
PAB 72,
Tech. Vol.
II, p.371 has an article "The
Importance of Havingness", which states:
".. the only advances worthy of the name of Sci-
entology occur when the auditor repairs or
remedies havingness on the pc. Without the re-
pair and remedy of havingness no real gains be-
come apparent. A preclear will not progress
when his havingness is impaired." Up to this
point, we are still dealing with subjective hav-
ingness.
Then in PAB 80, "Scientology's Most Workable
Process" on p.395, Ron asks:
what is there in this .. mountain of attainment
which is the highest gain? Amongst all this gold
where is the super-gold? .. Empirically, the
super-gold you have had is havingness... When
havingness is neglected, cases do not improve,
th a t's all there is to it."
He continues: "Well, amongst all havingnesses,
what is the super-gold process. There is one. It is
not very fast, it is terribly certain, it does not fail
in our experience and its gains are permanent. It
is a process known as the terrible trio."
The commands, each of which are asked a number
of times (depending on the auditor's judgement),
are: "Look around the room and tell me what you
could have." "Look around the room and tell me
what you would let remain." "Look around the
room and tell me what you could dispense with."
Ron also noted that according to report, the terri-
ble trio could be self-audited, and that periodic use
of any havingness process could aid cognitions.
In
The Free Spirit
of Jan. 86, p.4, in his article
"Which Standard Tech?" M.D. Stansfield stated,
"Terrific results were obtained in the early
days. .. There were many very powerful proc-
esses that worked beautifully that were aban-
doned .. whose only fault was that the PC would
go on cogniting and not have to get more audit-
ing!...Processes like terrible trio."
Terrible trio and the pre-have scale
I've tried the terrible trio on a self-auditing
basis, but could not get it to bite. So I asked a
friend to check variations on the meter, to see if
there was one that would read. He tried variations
of have, own, reach and handle, and control. I did
find as a result of this, that I got a "strugglely"
frustrated feeling and arrived at "put up with" or
"tolerate" as one meaning of "have."
I asked him to try: "Look around this room and
find something you could put up with." This
gave me an immediate line charge and big BD.
The other two questions could be: "Look around
this room and find something you could con-
tinue to put up with." And "Look around this
room and find something you don't have to put
up with."
"Put up with" falls under "endure," along
with "survive," and "tolerate" on the pre-have
scale and I have noted previously an irrita-
tion with "survive" in the sense of putting up
with a lot, perhaps that I no longer need to
put up with.
As a tech note, perhaps combining the pre-have
scale with terrible trio may provide a more ef-
fective approach to real havingness. Since ter-
rible trio has fallen out of favor, this may have
been one factor, in addition to those explored
by Stansfield in the reference cited above.
Factual havingness:
In Tech. Vol. Ill, p.307, Ron gives a factual
havingness form of terrible trio, which begins
with "Look around the room and find some-
thing you have, -- something you would con-
tinue, and -- something you would permit to
vanish."
Another way of defining factual havingness
would be as "available resources." These re-
sources could include personal skills, avail-
able tools, and access to others with special
expertise.
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