Scorpio (mudrunner@eudoramail.com) wrote: >You're not the only one for whom "Classic" UCP commands and their >variants proved too constrictive. I been thinking more about this. For me there are 7 basic questions about an event: Who, How, What, Where, When, Why and Which. When whos don't run, whens might, or wheres or whys etc. It's amazing what going around a black mass with these 7 can bring up. Loosen up one, and the others start to run. If one won't answer, find the one that will, and the others start to respond. The UCP command "WHERE have you been", stuck me in the where's which made an instant ridge of resentment as it acted as a wrong indication 6 out of 7 times on average. It doesn't matter if KP wants us to interpret the word 'where' differently, the bank and BT's and the whole composite has automatic reactions to words and the efforts to think them. Remember the very effort to think or say a word permeates the whole space of the pc and his bank. Even 'Who have you been in relation to' sticks me in the who's. So in general I tend to try to use the most general question possible, maybe something like "Spot something." But linguistics tend to limit what I am actually doing, and I don't recommend any particular phrasing. Then we have the words BEEN and ARE. These are BEINGNESS words, and stick a person in space and time. KP admits that as a person goes up tone, there will be a need to change these words to 'viewpoint' etc. But I would suggest that it is more subtle than that. Basically I would suggest that each pc needs to find his own wording to best get him to spot things in the past, present and future. This could even be run as a pre process itself, just to find his wording. When he finds a set, then he runs that set, until he needs to find another set. If UCP has dried up on someone, maybe all they have to do is run the wording pre process again. Or start auditing the others in his vicinty screaming for auditing :) Then there is the matter of what exactly we are auditing. KP says we are auditing 'YOURSELF', but that is highly introverting and in fact wrong as there is no 'YOURSELF'. But given that people think there is a 'YOURSELF', the truth is that what we are auditing is charge. Charge results from failed desire. Desire relates the self to something else. So we have SELF - DESIRE - SOMETHING ELSE. The point is you have two terminals, self and other, and the relationship between them which is desire. Now it might seem simplistic to boil down all relationships to desire, but any relationship that has charge on it, has desire and failure inter woven through the fabric of the relationship, both intensity of desire and considered probability of failure which results in tone amplitude and tone frequency. Intensity of desire = tone intensity. Probability of failure = tone frequency. Thus any spotting of the past, present or future, needs to evenly cover all these aspects of self, desire/relation and other. The basic fundamental of UCP, which is to spot something in the past, present, and future and compare ALL OF THEM TO EACH OTHER, can be brought about by many different wordings and approaches, both in rote session and in backgrounding throughout the day. If you are only comparing the past to the present and the future to the present you are missing out on comparing the past to the future and leaving one leg of the triangle unaudited. That will also cause a bog. A more thorough analysis of exactly what is worth spotting about the past, present and future is also in order. There is vast richness in between self and other. Homer