Theres also dulloldfart, see the links at the bottom of his sig line
for online sessions
http://www.forum.exscn.net/showpost.php?p=543844&postcount=7
2. Free online sessions 24/7 at RoboCounsellor
http://www.robocounsellor.com/
0
Thanks for the promo.
PaulsRobot is better for scios than RoboCounsellor, whose intended audience is non-scios.
Paul
I'm looking for somebody that has the necessary qualifications and is willing to give me some auditing...
I am based in Southampton?Portsmouth area but would travel a little way for a good auditor.
Any help please?
I'm looking for somebody that has the necessary qualifications and is willing to give me some auditing...
I am based in Southampton?Portsmouth area but would travel a little way for a good auditor.
Any help please?
Conclusion
Talking about a coherently defined "control agenda" is to some extent a false premise. The body of beliefs and assumptions that makes up Scientology is emphatically not a coherent system; it was assembled piecemeal over the years, and the effect of external influences and Hubbard's own changing state of mind can clearly be seen in its many contradictory elements. Even so, there are certain consistent themes running throughout Scientology, replicated through increasingly broad areas of interest — something which the concept of the control agenda highlights.
Those involved in counseling ex-Scientologists have often commented on the extremely durable hold which the belief system has over its adherents. This is especially true of current members (see Bob Penny's excellent Social Control in Scientology for an analysis of the ways in which Scientologists are influenced by their Church) but also applies far beyond the confines of the Scientology organisation. Many ex-Scientologists go through a stage of continuing to practice Scientology whilst rejecting what they see as the arbitrary authoritarianism of the Church; some remain in this stage for a long time, joining the loosely-knit group of "independent Scientologists" known as the Freezone or joining other offshoots of Scientology.
Hubbard frequently described Scientology as "the science of certainty", and this is the true appeal of the control agenda: it provides the individual Scientologist with a complete worldview ranging from his personal life to the nature of the universe itself and promises him the prospect of taking complete control of every aspect of life. This is a highly attractive proposition to many. It is no wonder that people choose to follow the certainties of Hubbard's control agenda rather than face an uncertain world governed by uncontrollable and incomprehensible forces. Parting from the control agenda is, then, not simply a matter of exposing Hubbard's errors and personal faults; it requires a leap of faith, out of the light of easy certainty and into the uncertain darkness of the real world.
Chris Owen
November 2000
I'm looking for somebody that has the necessary qualifications and is willing to give me some auditing...
I am based in Southampton?Portsmouth area but would travel a little way for a good auditor.
Any help please?
I think the guardians office vid did the trick.