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			Chapter Fifteen: Core splits, Denial programming, the last Five 
			Steps of Discipline Virtual Reality Programming 
			by: Svali 
			 
			Virtual reality programming (VR) is a form of programming that has 
			become more and more widely used in the past few decades. It 
			involves the person being placed in VR headsets and suit while a 
			cult created VR disk is used to run the program. It can be used to 
			create 3D and holographic images, and especially is useful in 
			scripted programming, and target practice sequences for assassin 
			training. Under hypnosis , the person will really believe they are 
			in the scene.  
			 
			Virtually any scenario can be recreated. Images to be ''burned in'' 
			will be shown on the VR disk, and reinforced repetitively during the 
			programming sequence. Some trainers feel it removes the element of 
			''human error'' in training, and use it quite extensively. VR 
			programming, like any other programming, means going inside and 
			finding out the distortions that were placed in the parts that went 
			through the programming, allowing them to see how they were 
			deceived, and dealing with the trauma associated with the 
			programming.  
			 
			Denial Programming:  
			
			Denial programming begins with the first experiences the infant goes 
			through in life. The child has been horrendously wounded and 
			traumatized, yet the next morning, the adults around him are acting 
			normally, as if nothing had happened. They are modeling a lifestyle 
			of denial for the infant and young child. This is reinforced later 
			by the child being told:  
			
				
				''It was just a bad dream'' (oh, how the child wants to believe this 
			lie. It makes the pain less to think it didn’t really happen)  
				 ''It’s just your imagination; it isn’t really happening'' (which is 
			again embraced as an escape from the horror). Denial will also be 
			fed by the adults around the child telling them that they will never 
			be believed if they disclose. There will be set ups to teach the 
			child what they see and hear, and to teach the child to trust 
			outside adults to tell them their reality.  
			 
			
			A typical set up will go like this:  
			
				
				The adult will hold an object such as an orange in their hand, and 
			ask the young child, about age two or three, ''what is this?''. The 
			child will quickly respond, ''oh, an orange!'' The child will be 
			shocked, and told, ''no, it’s an apple.'' The child will be 
			confused, because what they are looking at is obviously an orange. 
			It is the color orange, smells like an orange, looks like an orange. 
			The question will be repeated. The child may answer again,'' an 
			orange,'' and will be shocked again. Finally, the child, unsure and 
			not wanting to be punished, will say, ''an apple,'' and be praised.
				
  The purpose of this exercise is to teach the child to not trust 
			their own reality, and look to outside adults or leaders to tell 
			them what reality really is.  
			 
			
			That is the basis of denial: the person learns to not trust their 
			own reality, because of punishment and fear when they have spoken 
			the truth. 
  Alters will be created as the child grows, whose purpose is to deny 
			the cult abuse. If any leakage or breakthrough occurs, the denial 
			alter’s job is to create a plausible explanation: it was a 
			nightmare, a book the person read, a movie they saw, etc. These 
			alters will read and quote literature that refutes SRA. THESE ALTERS 
			OFTEN BELIEVE THAT THEY ARE SAVING THE LIFE OF THE SURVIVOR. They 
			have been told that if the survivor remembers, and believes the 
			abuse, the survivor will be killed, or the denial alter will be 
			severely punished or shattered for not doing their job. These parts 
			have a vested interest in their job: they believe their very 
			existence and they body’s survival, depend upon them.  
			  
			
			Suggestions:  
			
				
				Arguing with a denial alter will not work, since they are not 
			motivated by logic, but fear. A better approach is to ask them what 
			they fear if the person remembers. This will open up the deception 
			and lies that were ground in. They may be protecting the survivor 
			from suicidal alters behind them, who are programmed to kick in if 
			denial is broken through. Allowing them to vent their concerns, and 
			enlisting the aid of helpers or cognitives who do not have suicidal 
			or denial programming will help. Showing them reality in a gentle 
			way, allowing them to ''listen in'' on others who share will go a 
			long way. 
  Some denial is the natural consequence of self protection from the 
			horrors of abuse; not all denial is programming. But if denial is 
			constantly blocking therapy, and causing it to come to a complete 
			standstill; if the person becomes highly suicidal every time denial 
			is set aside briefly, then the possibility needs to be considered. 
			Safety, inner cooperation, and patience will go a long way in 
			decreasing denial. As denial backs down, you can expect an immense 
			amount of grieving as the truth is realized. Denial protected the 
			survivor from the horrendous pain of the truth, and should be let go 
			of extremely slowly and cautiously, with plenty of support during 
			the grieving stage.  
			 
			
			Core splits:  
			
				
				Core splits are intentional traumatic splits created from the core 
			personality. 
  The core may be literally ''splintered'' by overwhelming 
			psychological and physical/spiritual trauma. The trauma needed to 
			create a core split must be very early and psychologically 
			devastating. Fetal splits may occur, but they are rarely a core 
			split; instead, the core creates an alter, but remains. 
  Core splits are done between the ages of 18 months and three years. 
			Usually at least one parent or main caretaker is involved in the 
			trauma, because this creates the psychological devastation necessary 
			to split the core. Physical trauma alone rarely causes core splits. 
			The torture is intense and prolonged, until the child collapses. It 
			may be shocking, stretching, being hung in a high place, or a 
			combination of several techniques. Being placed in ''shock boxes'', 
			or near drowning are also used. 
  The techniques that create core splits are also dangerous, since 
			they can also cause autism if the child cannot endure the 
			programming. When I was in the cult, I fought to stop core splitting 
			because occasionally children were lost or the foundational 
			personality was too weakened. 
  The core may split into two, three, or up to eight splits 
			internally. Each split will be a piece of the ''core child''. The 
			original core will not resurface after splitting. These splits are 
			used by cult trainers to be used as templates to create systems 
			within the child. A core split, or a split from one, will be a 
			strong alter, and can be re-split many times in the programming 
			process, to create a multifaceted and diverse system within. 
				 
			 
			
			Suggestions:  
			
				
				Core splits represent intense foundational trauma. They will be the 
			basis for later systems, which may be completely dissociated from 
			the split as time goes on. Work on core splits should go very 
			slowly, and only late in the therapy process when there is immense 
			intrasystem cooperation. The survivor will need every internal 
			resource to deal with these traumas, and plenty of outside 
			therapeutic support. 
  It may mean hospitalization unless the survivor can keep the trauma 
			from emerging too quickly, and the therapist and survivor can go 
			extremely slow. 
  Other, less dissociated systems and fragments should be integrated.
				
  Acknowledging the abuse cognitively will be the first step in 
			dealing with core trauma. Letting more dissociated parts grieve 
			about ''hearing about'' what happened may come next. Allowing 
			feelings near the core to come close, a little at a time, with 
			helpers and internal nurturers offering support will help. 
  These feelings should be titrated, and looked at a little at a time. 
			Splits may be different ages, and may need to express themselves in 
			different ways. 
  There may be ''dream programming'', a ''fantasy world'', or other 
			flight from reality surrounding the core splits, that protects them 
			from contact with the outside world, which is perceived as brutal 
			and cold. Parts may be completely disconnected from outside reality 
			in an effort to buffer pain. 
  Slow, patient nurturing and reality orientation will help these 
			tremendously traumatized parts begin to join outer reality. Some 
			parts will always have been aware of what happened, but won’t care 
			to join the outside world. 
  Patience, allowing them to vent, will help most. 
				 
			 
			
			Steps of Discipline:  
			
				
				Step seven: Not caring  
				 This step will take the child further into a perpetrator role. The 
			child will be forced to hurt others and prove their ability to not 
			care during the process. 
  Step eight: Time travel  
				 The child will be taught spiritual principles of ''traveling'' both 
			internally and externally, with set ups, role playing, and guided 
			exercises reinforced with trauma. The goal will be to reach 
			''enlightenment'', an ecstatic state of dissociation reached after 
			severe trauma. 
  Steps nine, ten, eleven:
			These will involve programming that will vary according to the 
			child’s future role in the cult. Sexual trauma, learning to 
			dissociate and increase cognition, decrease feeling will be 
			emphasized in these steps. 
  Step twelve: ceremony of becoming at age twelve to thirteen, the 
			child will be formally inducted into the cult and their adult role 
			in a ceremony of ''coming of age''. They will prove this ability by 
			performing the role/job they have been training for, to the 
			satisfaction of the trainer and leaders; by undergoing a special 
			induction ceremony. The ritual and ceremony will be held with other 
			children of the same age, who are dressed in white and given a prize 
			as acknowledgement that they have completed the basics of their 
			training successfully. 
  They will continue to be abused, even as adults, but the major 
			traumatization and creation of system templates will have occurred 
			by this age. Future training will refine what was already placed in 
			the child by this age, or build upon the foundation.  
			 
			
			Suggestions:  
			
				
				Grieving the abuse, acknowledging the feelings associated with 
			undergoing the trauma will be important. It will be necessary to 
			deal with perpetrator guilt, since by this time the child will be a 
			perpetrator, and will have identified with the adult role models 
			around them. This can be difficult to do, since perpetration will 
			horrify the survivor when they remember this. Supporting the 
			survivor, remaining non judgmental, and encouraging acceptance of 
			these parts is important. Pointing out that at the time, they saw no 
			other options available will help. Realizing that perpetrator alters 
			saved the child’s life, and that they had no other way to act, 
			especially originally, the first time, will need to be pointed out. 
			The survivor may feel hostile towards, or reviled by perpetrator 
			alters, but they are the expression of the abuse and limited choices 
			they were allowed. Grieving being a perpetrator will take time and 
			caring support by others.  
			 
			
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