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"Remember to rub and yawn. "Focus on parts of your topic that seem to be not there but maybe ought to be, and put them above you. OK. "Focus on parts of your topic that seem to be not there but maybe ought to be, and put them below you. Good. "Put them to the right of you. Great. "Put them to the left of you. Fair enough. "Focus on parts of your topic that seem to be not there but maybe ought to be and put them in front of you. Good. "Put them behind you. Thank you."
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Focus on factors in your topic that seem to be not there although they should be. Aspects of your topic that are suppressed or occluded; parts that might be hidden behind black or invisible mental screens; parts that have been overwhelming to you. If you can't think of any not-there bits, just pretend there are parts that fit the description and go with that and see how it works out. The reason for this is that sometimes factors such as these do seem to play a part, but they are hard to see, especially as they sort of hide themselves by being "not-there". By using this command, one can sometimes uncover such hidden influences. An example might be a man molesting a frightened child, and telling the child "you will forget this--it didn't happen", and the terrified child obliges and hides the memory from view. The pretending in the first paragraph is just to get into the swing of it and see if anything that was previously hidden discharges--it is not the intent for you to make more of an imaginary event than it warrants. |