Mental image pictures are recorded in the analytical mind.THE
PARTS OF THE MIND
L. Ron
Hubbard discovered that the mind has two very distinct parts. One of
these — that part which one consciously uses and is aware of
— is called the analytical mind. This is the portion of the
mind which thinks, observes data, remembers it and resolves problems.
It has standard memory banks which contain mental image pictures, and
uses the data in these banks to make decisions that promote survival.
However,
two things
appear to be — but are not — recorded in the
standard banks: painful emotion and physical pain. In moments of
intense pain, the action of the analytical mind is suspended and the
second part of the mind, the reactive mind, takes over.
But those mental image pictures containing physical pain and painful
emotion are recorded in the reactive mind.
When
a person is fully conscious, his analytical mind is fully in command.
When the individual is “unconscious” in full or in
part, the reactive mind cuts in, in full or in part.
“Unconsciousness” could be caused by the shock of
an accident, anesthetic used for an operation, the pain of an injury or
the deliriums of illness.
When
a person is
“unconscious,” the reactive mind exactly records
all the perceptions of that incident, including what happens or is said
around the person. It also records all pain and stores this mental
image picture in its own banks, unavailable to the
individual’s conscious recall and not under his direct
control. Though it may appear that a person knocked out in an accident
is unconscious and unaware of happenings around him, his reactive mind
is actually industriously recording everything for future use.
The reactive mind is a memory that stores unwanted memories recorded
during pain and unconsciousness, such as "I am a loser." Instead of
being a loser, a person can access these memories with Dianetics and
remove their effect.
The
reactive mind does
not store memories as we know them. It stores particular types of
mental image pictures called engrams. These engrams are a complete
recording, down to the last accurate detail, of every perception
present in a moment of partial or full
“unconsciousness.”
This
is an example of an engram: A woman is knocked down by a blow to the
face. She is rendered “unconscious.” She is kicked
in the side and told she is a faker, that she is no good, that she is
always changing her mind. A chair is overturned in the process. A
faucet is running in the kitchen. A car is passing in the street
outside.
The
engram contains a
running record of all these perceptions.
The
problem with the
reactive mind is that it “thinks” in identities,
one thing identical to another. The equation is A=A=A=A=A. A reactive
mind computation about this engram would be: the pain of the kick
equals the pain of the blow equals the overturning chair equals the
passing car equals the faucet equals the fact that she is a faker
equals the fact that she is no good equals the fact that she changes
her mind equals the voice tones of the man who hit her equals the
emotion equals a faker equals a faucet running equals the pain of the
kick equals organic sensation in the area of the kick equals the
overturning chair equals changing one’s mind equals . . . But
why continue? Every single perception in this engram equals every other
perception in this engram.
In
the future, when this woman’s present environment contains
enough similarities to the elements found in the engram, she will
experience a reactivation of the engram. For example, if one evening
the faucet were running and she heard the sound of a car passing
outside and, at the same time her husband (the man in her engram) was
scolding her about something in a similar tone of voice as used in the
original engram, she could experience a pain in the side (where she was
kicked earlier). And the words spoken in the engram could also become
commands in the present: She might feel that she was no good, or get
the idea that she was always changing her mind. The reactive mind is
telling the woman that she is in dangerous quarters. If she stays, the
pain in the areas where she was abused could become a predisposition to
illness or a chronic illness in themselves. This phenomenon of
“awakening” the old engram is called restimulation.
The
reactive mind is not
an aid to a person’s survival for the excellent reason that
though it is sturdy enough to hold up during pain and
“unconsciousness,” it is not very intelligent. Its
attempts to “prevent a person from getting himself into
danger,” by enforcing its engram content, can cause
unevaluated, unknowing and unwanted fears, emotions, pains and
psychosomatic illnesses that one would be much better off without.
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