The 
Prometheus
Reports

Courtesy Clearbird Publishing. From 'Road to Clear' Level Four Pro:

 

Dating And Locating (D/L)

 

 

               



                 
   

 

Dating is the action the Auditor takes to help the PC spot the exact time something happened.

Locating is the action the Auditor takes to help the PC spot the exact place something happened.

The essence of Date/Locate is to bring the PC out of a past incident  and bring him into present time by erasing the Date by spotting it. And then erasing the Location by spotting it. The PC was out of the present (PT) and fixed by both date and location of the incident or event. 

Understand this simple point and you will have no trouble with Date/Locate or have much need for a rote procedure.

A number of his attention units were fixated in the past - still trying to resolve a past event or incident. It can be an engramic incident, which left the PC frozen in terror or overwhelmed by the emotional content or a threat to his survival at the time. But the process itself is simply to Date and Locate anything on the PCs track - near or far, good or bad. 

     

  Finding the exact time on the   
PCs track unsticks the PCs 
   fixed attention units and he   
can As-is the stuck moment.
A stuck viewpoint of the past 
is getting a "wake-up call". 

Picture: Pc stuck in incident 
as Roman soldier.

It is a fast and highly precise action. It is a very direct way of dealing with such images, events and incidents. It needs to be done smoothly and with good TRs. The results can be very swift and remarkable.

Uses
On a practical level, D/L is used as a handling for different situations brought to light on correction lists.

It can be used as a special rehab process. In this case you pinpoint a release point or win in the PCs auditing and put any wondering in his mind to rest. But you can also handle moments of loss and trauma and  unstick the PC from various other stuck points on the Time-track.

It is also used to correct wrong dates and locations found in earlier auditing. The Auditor will in many processes ask casually when and where something took place. Sometimes PCs can get hung up on that if it was wrong in some way.

In all these instances the PC will have his attention hung up on stuck points and finding the exact 'when' and 'where' will unstick him from them.

Background
A PC can have many confusions about time. He can have a wrong date for an incident. He can have two incidents mixed up so they are collapsed into one in his mind. He can think the one happened before the other (such as the effect incident happened before the cause incident). But worst of all, he can be completely stuck in an incident and believe it is still happening right now. He is viewing things from that stuck point in time. By dating that exactly you will blow such a stuck point of view. The PC will experience it as a sudden blow or disappearance of mental mass.

   A person can be completely   
stuck in a past incident and a 
past viewpoint so he thinks 
it is happening right now.

 Picture: Business man stuck in past incident.
He may think and act momentarily
 as if he lived in the  time of the Crusades.

With the Locate step you handle the stuck viewpoint of location. That is exactly where the PC was and viewed it from when it happened.

You may ask: If you have dated an incident to a Blow, is there anything left to blow on the Locate step?
The answer can be found in Axiom 38: "... Truth is the exact time, place, form and event.... Thus we see that the discovery of Truth would bring about an As-is-ness by actual experiment." When you put in the Locate step you blow the stuck Location (place) as well. Occasionally the whole thing can blow on the Dating step alone. In D/L you deal with exact point of view and do not pay attention to 'form and event' as you would in other processes.

By dating and locating, getting the exact time and place a specific event happened, the PC is able to blow the mass and energy connected with the incident.

Taken to Blow

Both the Date step and the Locate step are taken to "Blow". It is defined this way:
Definition of blow: The sudden dissipation of mass in the mind with an accompanying feeling of relief.

This definition must be understood by both Auditor and PC. It is cleared with the PC before beginning the Date/Locate steps. Have the PC demo it, using a demo kit as needed.

A blow is a definite manifestation. Vital data for the Auditor is that the PC must say "Something blew" or "It disappeared" or "It's gone" or "It vanished," not simply "I feel lighter. "

It can also be demonstrated by the Auditor this way: The Auditor puts his hand on the PCs arm. The PC will feel the light pressure. Then the Auditor removes his hand and the PC will notice the lack of pressure. That demonstrates a Blow.

Meter Dependence
During Dating/Locating the PC is on the Meter but the Auditor is primarily interested in the PCs answers. He merely keeps an eye on the Meter as well. He does not go into Meter dating or Meter locating unless the PC himself gives up.

A PC can be made more dependent on the Meter or can be made less dependent of the Meter. This depends upon the Auditor. If the Auditor "asks the Meter" all the time he and the PC get more and more dependent. If the PCs case is improving he will become more in-dependent of the Meter. That is what you want to see.

The rule is: Use the Meter to find dates - but only after the PC has been unable to come up with the date.

The same principle applies to the Locate steps.


Time
You are using a system of measurement of time to date anything. There are various systems for this. But time is basically a postulate or consideration so there is no absolute right system. It can be measured in terms of years ago. It can be measured by year, month and day (2001 AD, September 11). These two systems are the common ones for this planet. The term "year" is an Earth term. It is the time it takes planet Earth to complete an orbit around the sun. In larger Whole Track dates different systems were used. The whole point is to use the system the PC is using.  You want to blow a past time the PC is stuck in. And the PC will very often use the dating system of the time period he is stuck in. It doesn't matter what system of time measurement the PC uses. It is important that the Auditor accepts the PCs data. That means he uses the system the PC is using and he doesn't try to change it.

    

The Auditor accepts 
   the time measurement   
system the PC uses and
  does not try to change it.
   If it was "one million hour   
glasses ago", that's fine.  

First you simply ask the PC, "When was it?". He may tell you in terms of "years ago" or "weeks ago." Or he may say "It was 1792" or "It was the 24th of May 1492." Or he may come up with an earlier track system of dating. Either way, you take it and if he has said "Exactly at  Midnight on March 12, 1918" you don't then ask "How many years ago?" He basically just told you and your question would be a form of not accepting his data by trying to alter the dating system the PC is using.

Rule: You accept and use the dating system the PC is using. 

It is a very remarkable thing that a PC can figure out in years when something happened earlier than this planet. The PC has some sort of mental computer that can do this. But there is no point in trying to get the PC to convert a date to some other system.

When the PC has it the Auditor sticks to the PCs exact statement. He calls it back by that system (time ago or by date). To call it back is an indication. You use the PCs exact wording when doing that.


Implant dates 
Implant dates are dates which were implanted in the PCs mind by various bad practices of the whole-track. They were implanted to mess up the PCs sense of time. Usually they only give small reads while actual dates read well. If you suspect that you are getting false dates out of an Implant you Meter check "Implant date?" and you will get a read. After that is indicated the false Implant date will no longer read. The actual date will read well.

Meter-check this:

a) a false date from an Implant?
b) an actual date?

and the Meter  will tell which and you indicate that to the PC.

Location
On the Locating step  you use direction and distance. Just as time is basically a consideration, so is distance. And there are many systems of measuring distance, both on this planet and earlier on the track. Distance can be measured in miles, kilometers, light-years, etc. There are even many different types of 'Miles', Nautical Miles, American Miles, Scandinavian Miles and even Metric Miles (10 kilometers, used in Sweden). In one whole-track space civilization, intergalactic distances were measured in terms of how long the distance took to travel for a particular type of spaceship called a Hylan; intergalactic distances were measured by the number of "days of Hylan space flight." PCs have a tendency to use the system that was used at the time of the past location that he is stuck in. Just as a PC can use a sort of mental computer to convert Whole Track dates into "years ago," he can also mentally convert some distances into "miles" or "kilometers". But the Auditor will never ask him to do so.

Rule: You accept and use the distance system the PC is using. 

And once the PC has stated the distance the Auditor sticks to the PCs exact statement. He calls it back by that system. To call it back is an indication. You use the PCs exact wording when doing that.

 



          
   

You locate the exact past 
   location from where the PC   
is. You find direction and 
distance, using the PCs 
system of measurement.
It can be next door 
or galaxies away.
Pc can also give it in 
relation to landmarks

 

Locating Step
As in dating the Auditor may have to help the PC with the Meter. But the Auditor never starts to Meter-check unless the PC can't get it by himself.

Sometimes you get the blow early in the procedure, on the direction step alone or on the PC realizing it happened somewhere else, or "not here" or "Australia" or whatever. The Auditor must be alert for the BD and F/N and ask the PC if it blew. To go on is an overrun and messy as it already blew.

If you don't get a blow on finding the direction and distance, you will usually get a blow on calling the location back to the PC as an indication. If not, suspect an error in the direction or distance - or the Auditor altered it in calling it back.

In locating the Auditor is getting the past physical location of the incident. The Auditor gets the direction, distance, what galaxy, star, planet, country, etc. In this way he pinpoints it to the exact location in space where it happened.

In drilling and doing the procedure, remember this: it is not done rotely; one uses the questions that apply.

For example, if it occurred "next door" one would not ask "What planet?". If the PC on the dating step has said it's "two years ago" you wouldn't go on and ask "What galaxy?" when locating the same incident, of course.

If the incident happened outside a town in the open you wouldn't ask what city, house, street or room, either. You use common sense and ask the questions that apply.

The Auditor does not try to run incidents or Engrams at the same time he is doing the Locate step. It is simply location. Where? What? How far? 
(Joke.  As they say in real estate: Location, location, location!).

If there is no instant blow when the location is fully spotted and it seems correct, the location is called back to the PC. It usually blows when it is called back to the PC after it is known.


Two Separate Drills
There are two drills for dating and locating. Which one is used depends upon PCs ability to find and give the data. The first drill is where the PC gives the data. The second drill is where the Auditor has to use the Meter to get all the data. As with all processing, the PCs ability will increase as you go along; the Auditor must be alert for this and change from Meter dating and locating to only have to accept and take the PCs data. It can also happen that a PC who was able to find and give the data may run into something  heavy and in need of assistance. The rules are:

Never use the Meter if the PC can find the data by himself. Never let the PC struggle if he can't find it by himself. Never use the Meter to challenge or 'correct' the PCs data.

 

The Procedure

Educational Step
Before you do date-locate with a PC for the first time you must clear what you will be doing and the words and terms used. He has to understand this and know what is expected of him.

1. Give the PC an R-Factor that "You will be dating the past time of the incident (i.e. when it happened), until that blows".
 
2. Clear the word " blow" with the PC per the Tech Dictionary definitions:
Blow, n.1. the sudden dissipation of mass in the mind with an accompanying feeling of relief. 2. a definite manifestation and the PC must say "something blew" or "it disappeared" or "it's gone" or "it vanished," not "I feel lighter."
 
3. Clear any misunderstoods the PC may have on dates and dating or words used in measurement of time, or numbers (e.g. "billions," etc.).
 
4. Give the PC an R-Factor that "You will establish the direction and distance in order to find the past location of the incident (i.e. where it happened), until that blows".
 
5. Clear the term "direction" and the use of pointing to give a direction. Clear the term "distance" and any misunderstoods the PC may have on measurement of distance (like miles, kilometers, light-years, etc.).
 
6. Have the PC understand you primarily want answers from him, not the Meter. Explain the Meter is only a help if he can't find it and will only be used to the extent it is absolutely needed. Also, if the PC should suddenly realize the date or location he should simply tell you right away. Have the PC understand you are going for a blow of mass. Should that occur at any point of dating and locating he should make sure to tell you, as that is the EP of the step. 
 
 

Date to Blow - Locate to Blow by Steps

D/L Method 1: Pc Can Find the Data
 
Dating Drill No. 1

1. R-Factor: "We're going to date the past time when that (___) happened precisely, until the mass blows."
 
2. Ask the PC when it happened. (If the PC doesn't know, go to Meter dating, per Dating Drill No. 2.)
 
3. Write down the PCs answer.
 
4. If not already given, have the PC give the rest of the date right on down to the
fraction of a second.
 
5. Call the date back to the PC accurately and in the same order in which it was given, and it will blow.
 
(Caution: The blow may occur earlier in the dating steps and the Auditor must not go on past a blow. If you suspect a blow of mass happened and PC hasn't expressed this, ask him if it blew.)
 


Locating Drill No. 1 

1. R-Factor: "We're going to find the past location where (___) happened precisely, until the mass blows."
 
2. Get the PC to point to where it happened. (Have him point with finger - but still holding cans -  in the direction to the past location.)
 
3. Ask the PC the distance to that location. (This is the distance from where the PC is now to that past location.)
 
4. If not already given have the PC give the rest of the distance right on down to decimals or fractions, until you have a precise distance.
 
5. Call the distance back to the PC accurately and in the same order in which it was given, and it will blow.
 
NB. If the PC starts giving you the location in some other way such as "At the North side of Piccadilly Circus, London," you would of course accept the PCs data, and not try to make him say how many miles away, or anything else.
 
(Caution: The blow may occur earlier in the locating steps and the Auditor must not go on past the blow. Sometimes the blow will occur on asking the PC to point. Sometimes the PC, while finding the date, will also get the location and blow it too. If you se a BD and F/N on the Meter you should suspect it blew. If the PC hasn't expressed this, ask him if it blew.)
 

D/L Method 2: Auditor is Finding it with the Meter
 
Dating Drill No. 2
 
If the PC didn't know when it happened (on step 2 of Dating Drill No. 1), you go to Meter dating.

0. Figure out (if not obvious) if it is a this lifetime and this planet event you are D/L. This is an optional step you can put in to help you use the right type of measurement system.

1. If it is not a this lifetime and/or this planet event, establish a workable time measurement system. It can be years ago or by year (1492 AD) or some entirely different system. Find a system that is real to the PC for that type of incident.
 
2. Establish the order of magnitude. (EM 22 and 25). Be open to any PC input throughout as he may only need some Meter help.
 

3. Meter date it right on down precisely, even to fractions of a second, until you get a blow-F/N.
 
4. If no blow-F/N when the full date is found, call it back to the PC accurately and in the same order it was found and you should get a blow.
 
5. If you didn't get a blow there is either an error in the date or some part of the date, or it is not precise enough, or it could have blown earlier and you didn't catch it.

To find out which by Meter-check:

Wrong date?
Incompletely dated?
Implant date?
Some part of the date was incorrect?
Already blown?

Handle what reads, and you will get a blow-F/N.


Locating Drill No. 2
 
It is unusual the PC can't get the direction and distance, or otherwise pinpoint the exact past location. Should you run into this, do the same drill as given in Locating Drill No. 1. But now you use the Meter to establish each step.

1. Get PC to point to the location to get the direction. (He should do this while still holding onto the cans). Indicate whatever reads on the Meter if needed.

2. Establish what system of measurement of distance (i.e. miles, kilometers, light-years, or whatever).
 
3. Get the distance, using the Meter and order of magnitude etc.
 
4. Get any remaining increments of distance on down to fractions or decimals.
 
5. Call back the distance or location as an indication, and you should get a blow- F/N.
 
6. If no blow there has been an error and you Meter-check:

Is some part of the location wrong?
Wrong direction?
Wrong distance?
Incompletely located?
Already blown?

Handle what reads, and you will get a blow-F/N.

Warning: If Date/Locate goes nowhere and the Auditor can't easily correct the error in dating or in locating, do not continue messing up the PC with wrong dates or wrong locations, as these can be very upsetting to a case. In this case simply indicate to the PC that "there is an error in Dating or Locating". End off for C/S instructions.

A method that can be used in locating when applicable is given below. This must not however be done rotely when it doesn't apply. If you knew the incident happened in the recent past or this lifetime, you would start with "What country?" and not ask "What galaxy?" as that does not make sense, and would throw the PC backtrack.

Point (PC points with finger)
Distance? (including small fractions or decimals to get the exact distance)
What galaxy?
What star?
What planet?
What country?
What city?
What street?
What house?
Position on street?
What room?
Distance from front of house?
Where in the room?
How far from each wall?
How far off the floor?
How far from the ceiling?
 

You continue with questions to narrow it down to the precise location, to a blow-F/N.
 
NOTE: These steps are not rote, but gives you an idea of how to ask. Listen to the PC and work with him, realistically, to get the location spotted exactly, but do not evaluate for him in any way.
 
Should  the location turn out to be in the middle of the ocean or in open land, etc., the Auditor uses available landmarks or reference points to get the location (like, "distance from the nearest point of land?" or, "distance from the big rock?", etc.) down to a blow-F/N.
 
If, while locating, the PC starts to run the incident or gives too much "scene" the Auditor has the PC point again, then continues from where he left off on the Locate steps. You want to pinpoint it in time and place - that's all.
 

Thing to Watch
In dating and locating there is a possible source of BPC, peculiar to dating and locating.
 
A correct date for one incident or mass can act as a wrong date for another incident or mass, as it is a wrong date for that one.
 
A correct location for one incident or mass can act as a wrong location for other incidents or masses, as it is wrong for the others.
 
It is peculiar to dating and locating that a right date or a right location can cause BPC by also being a wrong date or wrong location for other incidents or masses. This does not always occur, but is noted here should an Auditor or C/S run into it.
 
Signs of this are:

a) PC getting upset inexplicably
b) getting a read on both "Correct date?" and "Wrong date?"
c) TA going up
d) increase of mass or pressure.

It will ease or disappear on the indication that "The date found was a wrong date for other incidents or masses", and on the indication that "The location found was a wrong location for other incidents or masses".
 

Summary
Finding a correct Date, especially when pinpointed to seconds and fractions of seconds, will result in a blow.

Finding a correct Location, especially when pinpointed to small increments of distance (fraction of inches or millimeters), will result in a blow.

Date/Locate, when done correctly, quickly and smoothly, works well and is successful. The longer it takes the more it will restimulate all sorts of other things which have nothing to do with the course of action.
 
The Date/Locate steps must not be done by rote or robotically. One has to understand the mechanics of how it's done and why. At any time, be willing to fast-forward the procedure if the PC suddenly can pinpoint something by himself.
 
The essence of Date/Locate is to bring the PC out of the past and into present time by erasing the Date by spotting it; and erasing the Location by spotting it. The PC was out of the present (PT) and fixed by both date and location of the incident.
 
Understand this simple point  of the theory and you will have no trouble with it or much need for a rote procedure.

This is a fast and highly precise action. It needs to be done smoothly and with good TRs. The results can be very remarkable.