I have divided Idenics into two main parts, the mechanics (the
questions and processes used and the concepts they are based on) and
the application (the way the mechanics are applied to a client). Only
by understanding both parts can one hope to comprehend the scope of
Idenics. When comparing Idenics to a song, the words of the song
would be the mechanics and the music would be the application.
Even though these two parts are discussed separately, their
relationship to one another is inseparable. The development of
Idenics' mechanics was dependent on its application, and visa versa.
The same dependency exists in their use with a client.
The practicing Scientologist or trained technical person will
probably have great difficulty trying to understand Idenics.
Concentrating on Idenics' mechanics, they will compare these mechanics
to those of Scientology's. From this narrow viewpoint, they will make
little or nothing of our mechanics, only seeing them as a small part
in the great scheme of Scientology technology. Idenics' application
will mean even less to the tech person or practicing Scientologist.
Coming from a point of view that must defend the evaluative and
judgmental aspects of Scientology tech, they will see Idenics'
application as invalid and "theetie-weetie".
In an effort to explain our application I have made comments like,
"the practitioner must trust the client" and "the answers
someone is
seeking about themselves is within them". It is not surprising
to
have a Scientologist take these comments out of context, viewing
Idenics' application as "sweetness and light". Making nothing
of our
application justifies the Scientology approach of dealing with people,
as well as the "answers" that Scientology thrust down the
throats of
its members.
However, the point that I was attempting to make regarding our
application is simple and straightforward. The Idenics practitioner
doesn't operate from any preconceived or predetermined ideas about a
client when working with that individual. The practitioner's full
source of information about someone that they are processing is with
that person. This is all that I was trying to communicate when I
talked about the practitioner trusting the client and the client
having the answers about themselves within themselves.
Where else would the answers about you be accept with YOU? Who
else lived your life or had your experience? How would anyone else
know how you responded in some circumstance? How would someone else
know the responses you got stuck with or the kinds of incidents you
got stuck in? How would anyone else know the subjects that you should
address?
A practitioner of Scientology professes to know these things, where
a practitioner of Idenics doesn't. That's the difference, end of
story.
Without being submerged in a quagmire of "pretended knowingness",
the Idenics practitioner is not involved with all the speculative
activities of a Scientology tech person. Without these encumbrances,
a practitioner of Idenics can be completely focused on the job at
hand.
Even though a practitioner doesn't try to figure out, analyze or
evaluate a client, his role is far from passive. Knowing that all the
"answers" necessary in an individual's case resolution are
with that
person, an Idenics practitioner's sole activity is to assist that
individual to ACCESS those answers.
Accessing these answers on one's own is extremely difficult. The
reason for this difficulty is covered in the mechanics of Idenics,
more specifically, in the subjects of viewpoints and identities.
I define a viewpoint, simply, as a point from which one perceives.
Two people in a room are viewing that room from different viewpoints.
Even if they were crowded together looking out of a tiny window, there
would still be some difference in viewpoint. Add to that the
difference in tastes and evaluations of what is seen, and we get a
great difference between the two individuals.
Even though each is unique, the common denominator between all
viewpoints is that every viewpoint is limited. For example, you and
I, sitting in chairs facing one another, are looking from different
viewpoints. From my viewpoint I can see the wall behind you and you
can't. From your viewpoint, you can see the wall behind me and I
can't. Why? Because the points from which we perceive are limited as
they only see within a certain parameter. This doesn't mean that WE
are limited; we could turn around or switch chairs. But as long as
we are in those viewpoints, we are limited to that degree.
Now imagine that you are sitting in a chair facing a wall. On the
other side of that wall are some "answers", for your eyes
only. From
the chair, the limitations of that viewpoint prevent you from seeing
those answers. All of the wonderful information that others give to
you, such as what's on the other side of their walls and what the wall
is made up of, is completely irrelevant. The only relevant action is
for you to get up out of the chair, walk around to the other side of
the wall, thereby shifting to a viewpoint that is appropriate in order
to inspect those answers.
But if you were stuck in the chair, and didn't even know that you
were stuck there, you could stare at that wall forever and not be able
to see what's on the other side. All you would be able to do from the
viewpoint, "in the chair", is think about, figure-figure,
and
speculate regarding what is on the opposite side of that wall. You
might be very susceptible to others' explanations and answers, which
are, at their best, only additional speculation. However, from the
appropriate viewpoint, "standing on the other side of the wall",
viewing and inspecting what is there is easy.
The above explanation provides another way of saying what an
Idenics practitioner does. The practitioner assists the client in
freeing themselves from certain viewpoints and assuming the
appropriate one from which they can inspect information relative to
an
issue's resolution.
Not knowing what the appropriate viewpoint is for any client at any
time, the practitioner must be extremely familiar with the Idenics
mechanics and skilled in their application. By asking the client the
proper questions, a practitioner will get close enough to the mark to
where the individual will drop into the appropriate viewpoint. From
there, the practitioner needs only facilitate the client's looking at
and inspection of what is perceivable from that viewpoint.
Even though there may be more than one viewpoint or identity
connected with a condition and needing to be worked with, complete
resolution of the unwanted condition is usually very fast. As a
bonus, one may resolve conditions not directly addressed that were
somehow connected to the viewpoint or identity one was handling.
When someone would ask John what he did, he would usually respond
with a simple answer: "I get the client to look, and keep their
nose
in it until they have fully inspected what is there. That is all I
do". In truth, that is a good statement of what an Idenics
practitioner does. The practitioner has lots of questions that they
can ask. But every question is just another way of saying, "Have
a
look".
End of Part 15 of 25
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