DYAD BASICS
This paper briefly summarizes the important basic
technical details of the dyad format used for clearing the mind
and increasing one's ability to communicate.
This paper describes the clearing dyad. The
Enlightenment Intensive dyad is somewhat different and is covered
in detail elsewhere.
Basic Setup
- Two individuals sit a comfortable distance apart
and at the same height.
- One individual is the receptive partner.
The other individual is the active partner.
- The partners reverse roles (active and receptive)
after each completed cycle. This is often called "changing-over".
- A cycle may be a fixed interval of time, typically
5 minutes, or after one complete compliance with a dyad instruction.
This latter form is called "cycle change-overs". (The
compliance is described in detail below.)
- If the 5 minute interval is used, a monitor calls
out, "Thank your partner. Change over," at the end of
each 5 minute period.
- A dyad period lasts 40 minutes and ends
with a bell or gong. A monitor says "Thank you." at
the end. Active partners should finish up their current cycles
quickly after a bell.
Receptive partner's role
- Gives an instruction to the active partner.
(Many possible instructions are listed in the Dyad Instruction List,
later in this document.)
- Keeps attention on the active partner.
- Listens to what the other says.
- Understands what the other says.
- Acknowledges when the communication cycle is
complete.
Active partner's role
- Receives the instruction from the receptive partner.
- Generally does something "internally"
to comply with the instruction.
- Communicates a response to the receptive partner.
Dyad Cycle Summary
- Receptive partner gets the instruction clear
in his own mind.
- Receptive partner puts his attention on the active
partner.
- Receptive partner communicates the instruction
clearly and directly to the active partner. (1)
- Receptive partner keeps his attention on the
active partner and is open to a response.
- Active partner listens to receptive partner and
receives the instruction.
- Active partner complies with the instruction
to the best of his ability. (2)
- Active partner communicates his compliance to
the receptive partner. (3)
- Receptive partner listens to, receives, and understands
the active partner's communication.
- Receptive partner acknowledges the compliance
by saying "thank you", "OK", or some equivalent
phrase.
- Partners reverse roles.
The Communication Cycle -- Shoot for this ideal.
- You have a thought.
- You intend that another duplicate
that same thought in their consciousness from you.
- You do whatever it takes to get the thought
across.
- The other duplicates the thought. He gets
that thought, nothing added on and nothing left
off.
- The other acknowledges that he got your
thought from you. (A simple "OK", "thank you",
"got it", or the equivalent will do.)
- It may not be possible to get a communication
across. It depends on the receiver as well as the sender. There
are just a few alternatives:
- Wait until the other is ready-could be forever
- Drop it entirely
- Find a prior communication that, if told
to him first, would enable him to get your main message. There
may be more than one prior message required.
- One must be able to tolerate not getting a communication
across to another.
Perfecting the Technique
- The receptive partner should not change the wording
of the instruction, give it sloppily, or put his own emotional
content on the instruction to lead the active partner. The instruction
is given clearly and cleanly.
- The receptive partner should not use facial expressions,
nods, body language, "vibes", or any other means to
express an opinion or evaluation of what the active partner says.
- With cycle change-overs, never change
over (reverse roles) until an understanding is reached.
- Whenever either partner doesn't know what to
do next, he or she raises a hand to get help from a monitor.
- If the active partner doesn't understand what
he or she is being asked to do or what the purpose of the instruction
is, he or she should raise his hand for help from a monitor. The
dyad should not continue while there is confusion about what the
active partner is to do to comply with an instruction.
- If the receptive partner can't remain neutral
about what the active partner says, he or she should raise a hand
for help from a monitor.
- When the receptive partner does not understand
what the active partner said, he or she can say,
- "Clarify that.", or "Clarify the
part about <...>."
- "Give me that again."
- "Say that again, louder."
- "Summarize your answer."
- The receptive partner must not use the queries
(listed above) to convey an opinion about what the active partner
said or about what his or her own response to the instruction
would be. (The receptive partner shouldn't be doing the instruction
along with the active partner. The receptive partner remains receptive.)
- The active partner can say, "Give me the
instruction again" to help him or her refocus on the instruction.
This is done within an existing communication cycle-it doesn't
mean that they are starting a new cycle.
- If the receptive partner is:
- Certain that he or she is in no way caught up
with the active partner's process, and
- Certain that he or she can interact with the
active partner without contaminating the active partner's process
with his or her own mental material,
he may make up an appropriate query to help arrive
quickly at an understanding of what the active partner said. He
should keep such queries simple and to the point.
Key information about the clearing instruction and its compliance
- It is an instruction directed to the active
partner, not a question. It's not "What is help?"; it
is "(You) Tell me what help is". The instruction should
be delivered with the expectation of a compliance. The
difference between giving an instruction and asking a question
is that an instruction is directed toward the individual. A question
tends to go directly to the mind, bypassing the individual.
- The instruction is something the active partner
can do. If the active partner does not understand what
to do, or just can't do it for whatever reason, it is not a valid
instruction for him or her. The active partner must grasp the
meaning of the instruction. If not, he or she will either go silent
or respond with something other than what is intended.
- The instruction must be clear to the receptive
partner as well. Just saying the words will not work because the
receptive partner will not know if the active partner complied
or not and this will communicate some of the receptive partner's
confusion to the active partner. The receptive partner must know
exactly what he or she wants the active partner to do. Don't begin
a dyad until both partners understand the intent of the instruction.
Get help from a monitor if either loses this conviction.
- The receptive partner has the responsibility
for getting the instruction across to the active partner, and
for deciding that the cycle is complete when it has been complied
with. Of course the active partner must also be satisfied that
he or she complied with the instruction. The receptive partner
is "in charge". (No authoritarian role is implied
however.)
- The instruction is something from the receptive
partner, not from a sheet of paper or part of the receptive
partner's memory storage in his brain. It is a live inquiry.
- Give the instruction each time as if it were
the first time-fresh. It is not connected with a previous cycle
nor does it anticipate a later cycle.
- The active partner does the instruction. The
receptive partner does none of it.
- The active partner's response should be due to
the fact that he or she has understood what it is the receptive
partner wants.
- The active partner's response must in some way
comply with the instruction. Otherwise it is a "non-compliance".
It is the responsibility of the receptive partner to make sure
there actually was a compliance. (With the enlightenment questions,
there is an agreement to say what comes up as a result of contemplation.
Although this might not sound like a compliance to the instruction,
it is accepted. But in a clearing communication cycle, there must
be a compliance to the instruction.)
- Fixing up what seems to be a non-compliance to
the receptive partner takes some tact. The receptive partner says,
"Tell me how that complied with the instruction." in
a non-blaming way. Don't change over until both are satisfied
that an understanding occurred. Ask a monitor to help if it starts
to get complicated.
- The active partner is never wrong (i.e.
bad) for not complying with the instruction. Just correct the
non-understanding and proceed. Get help from a monitor if necessary.
- The receptive partner should have the active
partner continue explaining about his compliance until the receptive
partner is sure he, the receptive partner, understands.
- If the active partner says, "I said some
things but I don't know if I complied with the instruction,"
the receptive partner accepts that, acknowledges, and gives the
instruction again.
- The receptive partner doesn't have to agree with
the active partner's communication. He or she just has to understand
it. The receptive partner must see that it is a valid response
in the active partner's estimation and can understand how
it is a compliance.
- There is no right answer to the instruction.
There is only the receptive partner's understanding of how the
active partner sees that the response is a compliance and how
the active partner sees that it is a compliance.
- If the receptive partner has a lot of unconscious
confusion or charge in his or her own mind or emotions in the
area that the instruction addresses, he or she will have more
trouble understanding the active partner's responses. This will
slow down the process, but it can still work.
This is a list of dyad instructions that have been
used over the years. It is by no means complete. Just reading
the instructions can be a powerful experience.
Confusion Clearing
Use Confusion Clearing to increase your intelligence.
The format has two steps: "Tell me what <...>
is", alternated with "Tell me what <...> isn't".
Use the following concepts:
1. Improvement | 6. Communication
| 11. Power |
2. Help | 7. Understanding |
12. Choice |
3. Responsibility | 8. Ability
| 13. Enlightenment |
4. Conflict | 9. Difference
| 14. God |
5. Contact | 10. Origin |
15. Death |
You can also choose any other concept that you want to clear up.
The goal is to split off other concepts that are attached to the
concept you are trying to clear. Separating similar concepts that
are connected in the mind eliminates confusion.
Janus Process
This process is very powerful. It can dramatically
increase one's awareness of interpersonal relationships.
Tell me something you want to tell me.
|
Tell me how communicating that changed our relationship.
|
Use 5-minute cycles. Acknowledge and repeat the second line after
each response until the end of the 5-minute period.
Compulsion Clearing
Compulsions make it seem like you have no freedom.
Compulsions are a false solution to problems in relationship with
others who seem powerful.
Thought Conditions Processes
Many people have put conditions on relationship,
thus limiting their ability and freedom to relate to others. These
processes can help release one from these fixed attitudes.
Tell me a condition in which it would be all right for you to be closer to another.
Tell me a condition in which it would be all right for you to be closer to others.
|
Tell me a condition in which it would be all right with you to communicate with another.
Tell me a condition in which it would be all right with you to communicate with others.
|
Tell me a condition in which it would be all right with you to duplicate another.
Tell me a condition in which it would be all right with you to duplicate others.
|
Decide that something is so.
Tell me what it is
Tell me any comments or observations you have about that.
|
Relating Exercises
Relating exercises open up the path between you and
another.
Tell me how you want to be loved.
Tell me how you want to love others.
|
Tell me an outstanding ability of yours. |
Tell me something you think we agree on.
Tell me something you like about me.
Tell me something about yourself (that you think I should know.)
Tell me something about yourself that you want me to understand.
|
Tell me something you have held back from others.
|
Express with emotion how you feel about life.
|
Tell me something about yourself that has never been completely understood.
Tell me what I need to know in order to understand that completely. (Repeat).
|
Tell me how you want to be communicated with.
Tell me how you want to communicate with others.
|
Tell me how you want to be helped.
Tell me how I could help you.
Tell me how another could help another.
|
Tell me how you want to be conscious of others.
Tell me how you want others to be conscious of you.
|
Express with emotion yourself. |
Tell me what you think I understand about you.
|
Tell me a thought , action, or creation of yours that no one has completely understood.
|
Tell me an outstanding ability of yours. |
Tell me a problem you are currently having in life.
Tell me what I need to know in order to understand that problem completely.
|
Tell me how you think others see you.
Tell me how you want others to see you.
|
Tell me something about yourself that others have not been understanding.
|
Tell me a goal (your goals) for life. |
Tell me a decision you could make. |
Tell me something you have done to another that was not best in your own estimation.
Tell me something you have done that is similar to that.
|
Tell me about your relationship with <...> (Person's name).
|
Tell me what you think you should tell me about your family of origin.
|
Tell me about your relationships with (men)(women).
|
Tell me about your relationship with money.
|
Tell me about an incomplete communication you currently have with someone in your life.
If you could talk to this person about yourself, tell me what you would say.
|
Put your attention on your partner as a conscious being (1/2 to 2 hours or longer).
|
Recovery Dyads
Recovery dyads handle specific fixed attitudes and
emotional blocks that result from past upsets and mis-emotional
experiences.
Tell me about you having to be perfect.
|
Tell me about your fear of criticism. |
Tell me about you denying your own consciousness.
|
Tell me about you denying your own accomplishments.
|
Tell me about you regularly overextending yourself.
|
Tell me about you having to seek approval. |
Tell me about you feeling more alive in a crisis.
|
Tell me about your fears when things are going well.
|
Tell me about you feeling compulsively responsible (or compulsively not responsible).
(Can be run alternately.)
|
Tell me about you feeling that you have to take care of (or rescue) others.
(Can be run alternately.)
|
Tell me about you having to isolate yourself from others.
|
Tell me about you having anxiety in relation to authority figures.
|
Tell me about you having fear of angry people.
|
Tell me about you feeling victimized. |
Tell me about you having trouble with intimate relationships.
|
Tell me about you confusing pity with love.
|
Tell me about you attracting and seeking people who tend to be dysfunctional.
|
Tell me about your clinging to relationships out of fear of being alone.
|
Tell me about you mistrusting your own feelings.
Tell me about you mistrusting other's feelings.
|
Tell me about you finding it difficult to express your emotions.
|
Tell me about you having to control others to feel safe.
|
Tell me about you feeling shame. |
Tell me about your feeling of abandonment. |
Tell me about you feeling that there's never enough.
|
Tell me about you feeling that you don't have the right to be you.
|
Tell me about you feeling that is never enough time.
|
Tell me about you blaming another.
Tell me about what you are avoiding in yourself by blaming another.
|
Tell me about you denying your own needs. |
Tell me about you denying that others have choice.
|
Couples Dyads
Use couples dyads to open the flow between you and
your partner.
Tell me something you like about me.
Tell me something you think we agree on.
Tell me something you think I should know.
|
Tell me something that you have withheld from me.
|
Tell me your goals I life.
Tell me your goals for our relationship.
|
How could I help you?
How could you help me?
|
Tell me how you want to be loved.
Tell me how you want to love others.
|
Tell me what you think I should know about sex.
|
Tell me what you think I should know about money.
|
Tell me something that is very important to our relationship.
Tell me what I need to know in order to understand that completely.
|
Tell me what <...> is. (May be paired with "Tell me what <...> isn't.)
|
- Love
- Sex
- Friendship
- A partner
- Marriage
- A husband
- A wife
- Infatuation
- Communication
- Understanding
- Reality
|
Karma Clearing
Clears karma in relationships. Frees you from suffering
from past mistakes.
- Tell me something you have done (to another)
that you think you should not have done.
Tell me what standard of yours you think you have
violated.
Tell me what effect you think this has had on <...>
(another's name).
- Tell me something you have failed to do (for
another) that you think you should have done.
Tell me what standard of yours you think you have
violated.
Tell me what effect you think this had on <...>
(other's name).
- Tell me something you have withheld from another.
- Tell me something you have done to another that was not best
in your own estimation.
Body Instructions
Improves your relationship with your body.
- Tell me your idea of what a body is.
Tell me your idea of what a body isn't.
- You get the idea of being a body.
You get the idea of not being a body.
Tell me what you did to be your body.
Unbe you body.
Tell me what you did to unbe your body.
Put your attention on it.
Tell me your comments and observations you have about
that.
- Tell me a mental attitude.
Tell me a body feeling.
Tell me your comments and observations you have about
that.
- You put a feeling in your body.
You put an opposite feeling in your body.
Tell me your comments and observations you have about
that.
Mind Course Exercises
These exercises were used to educate students who
were taking Charles Berner's Mind Course. They are drills that
inform you about the nature of mind. They increase your ability
to visualize or create pictures in your mind.
With your attention look to the right (left, above,
below, behind, in front) of your body.
Describe what you are aware of.
- Get a mental image picture.
Experience and describe as many perceptions as you
can of that mental image picture.
Tell me your comments and observations about that.
- Get a mental image picture.
View that picture from the original viewpoint.
Tell me your comments and observations about that.
- Get a mental image picture
Tell me something this reminds you of.
Tell me what similarity of significance is there
between the two.
Tell me your comments and observations about that.
- Get a mental image picture that has an emotion
in it.
Tell me the emotion.
Get a mental image picture with a similar emotion.
Tell me the difference between the two emotions.
Tell me your comments and observations about that.