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Techie's avatar

So true, Val, so so true.

I was down in the reception area at the Int Base one day when Peter Schless got a call that one of his parents had passed. He rushed down to take the call (we did have an internal phone system that could route external calls, but any family calls have to be taken in the presence of a security guard).

He was suffering from "misemotion" as anyone would. But then we found out it was not for him, someone got the names mixed up. He immediately felt better and made the comment that it shows that Hubbard was right about emotions. We just make them up as we go along.

Possibly that is how Hubbard worked, being a narcissistic sociopath and all that, but it doesn't work that way for most of us.

You might go on the meter and use repetition to desensitize your grief, tell the story, find the first moment you knew it was true, go into earlier similar stories all the way back to Arslycus.

You would walk away smiling just hours later.

But have you grieved for your loved one? Or just pushed it all under to resurface later as some self-destructive behavior? Will you need to grieve in earnest decades later?

As far as I know, Peter is still at the Int Base. No longer on the wings of love, to be sure.

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Chad Braunersrither's avatar

The was personally emotional. I missed so many life events while in Scientology and the Sea Org. Just another list of regrets i had because of getting involved with that ugly group.

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