M



MACHINE

1. an actual mechanism in the mind constructed out of mental mass and energy that has been made by the individual to do work for him, usually set up to operate automatically under certain pre-determined circumstances.



MADE

1. caused to happen; caused to be or become; produced.



MADE WRONG

1. invalidated. 2. shown to be incorrect or invalid. 3. not duplicated.



MAGNETIC FIELD

1. the space occupied by magnetic lines of force; space around a magnet in which the magnetic force exerted is appreciable.



MAGNITUDE

1. largeness; size; importance; quality.



MAJOR ACTION

1. anything the Clearing Practitioner does that is designed to change the case of or improve the ability of the Preclear; a process or series of processes.



MAJOR STABLE WIN

1. a great, firm success.



MAJOR THOUGHT

1. a complete idea or concept expressed in words by the Clearing Practitioner.



MAKE

1. to cause to happen.



MAKE UP

1. to put together; compose; compound. 2. to form; constitute. 3. to invent; create. 4. to arrange. 5. to resolve or decide (one’s mind).



MAKING

1. causing to happen.



MAKING AMENDS

1. making reparations or payment as satisfaction for insult or injury. 2. a point, 0.375, on the Scale of Emotional Expression at which the person cannot withhold anything.



MALE BODIES

1. homo sapiens bodies of the sex that make the egg of the female fertile to produce young.



MAN

1. a human being; person, whether male or female. 2. the human race; mankind. 3. an adult male human being.



MANAGE

1. to conduct or direct affairs; carry on business. 2. to contrive to get along; succeed in handling matters.



MANAGEMENT

1. the act, art or manner of managing or handling, controlling, directing, etc. 2. skillful managing; careful, tactful treatment. 3. skill in managing; executive ability.



MANIA (noun)

1. wild or violent insanity; specifically, the manic phase of manic-depressive psychosis, characterized generally by abnormal excitability, exaggerated feelings of well-being, flight of ideas, excessive activity, etc. [Greek mainesthai, to rage].



MANIC (adjective)

1. having or characterized by mania. 2. of or like mania. 3. the dramatization in an engram that looks like a win. 4. term used to describe any engram which is highly complimentary, and any compliment which it contains in it will be obeyed to its most literal, fullest extent. 5. the extremes of too quiet, “catatonia,” (withdrawn totally) and never quiet, “manic,” (too hectic), labeled as such in the field of psychiatry.



MANIC DEPRESSIVE (adjective)

1. designating, of, or having a psychosis characterized by alternating periods of mania and mental depression. 2. term used to describe the symptoms manifested by a person in close proximity to an undetected suppressive.



MANUAL

1. a book of instruction on how to do something.



MASS

1. condensed energy having bulk or weight. 2. the physical bulk of something; how solid it is, combined with how much space it takes up.



MASTER (noun)

1. a person with the ability or power to use, control, or dispose of something. 2. a person very skilled and able in some work, profession, science, etc.; expert.



MASTER (verb)

1. to become an expert in.



MASTERY (noun)

1. mastership; rule; control. 2. masterly ability; expert skill or knowledge. 3. the attainment of abilities for any course of study at the Center for Personal Advancement. 4. being adept with a meter, a standard session, Clearing Communication Cycle and the in-sessionness of a Preclear.



MATCH (noun)

1. any person or thing equal or similar to another in some way; a counterpart or facsimile. 2. either of two corresponding things or persons; one of a pair.



MATCH (verb)

1. to be equal, similar, suitable, or corresponding to in some way. 2. to make, show, produce or get a competitor, counterpart or equivalent to.



MATCHING

1. being alike or equal to.



MATERIAL (adjective)

1. of matter; of substance; relating to or consisting of what occupies space; physical.



MATERIAL (noun)

1. what a thing is or may be made of; elements, parts or constituents.



MATERIALS

1. tools, implements, articles, etc. needed to make or do something.



MATERIAL UNIVERSE

1. the physical universe made up of matter, energy, space and time.



MATTER

1. whatever occupies space. 2. a group of particles of energy located in a relatively stable relationship to each other.



MAYBE

1. perhaps; possibly.



ME

1. the one who is speaking.



MEAN

1. to have as the particular sense or significance; denote; indicate; specify.



MEANING

1. what is meant; what is intended to be expressed or understood by something; significance; sense.



MEANINGLESS

1. having no meaning or significance; senseless.



MECHANICAL

1. having to do with, or in accordance with the science of mechanics. 2. of or having to do with a machine, mechanism or machinery. 3. machinelike; automatic, as if from force of habit; lacking spontaneity, expression, intelligence, etc.



MECHANICS

1. the physical and quantitative structure and operation of things, and the way they interact, one with another, under specific circumstances and in obedience to certain rules. 2. the branch of physics dealing with the action of forces on bodies or fluids and with motion. 3. the way something, be it mind, body or matter, works or is constructed.



MEDICAL

1. of or connected with medicine or the practice or study of medicine.



MEDICINE

1. the science and art of diagnosing, treating, curing, and preventing disease, relieving pain, and improving and preserving health. 2. the branch of this science and art that makes use of drugs, diet, etc., as distinguished especially from surgery and obstetrics. 3. a chemical substance used for the treatment of disease or to alleviate pain.



MEDITATE (verb)

1. to think about; to contemplate inwardly on a thought or idea. 2. to think or consider deeply and continuously at length. [Latin meditari, to think about deeply and continuously]



MEDITATION (noun)

1. an Eastern practice of looking inward with eyes closed while thinking about a word or idea; an additive (creative) process that shuts off the mind and dulls the senses to external stress. 2. deep continued thought; reflection. 3. solemn reflection on sacred matters as a devotional act.



MEGALOMANIA

1. a mental disorder characterized by delusions of grandeur, wealth, power, etc.



MEMORY

1. any mental image picture of consciously perceived data which can be recalled by the individual.



MENACE

1. someone or something that represents a threat; danger.



MENTAL

1. having to do with the mind.



MENTAL IMAGE PICTURE

1. pictures stored in the mind which are copies of the physical universe or imaginary images.



MENTALLY

1. in, with, or by the mind. 2. as regards the mind.



MENTAL MASS

1. solidified mental energy which often brings about undesirable pains or sensations (charge). 2. mentally created matter and/or energy. 3. involuntarily or voluntarily created mental matter, energy, space and time. (Its proportionate weight would be terribly slight compared to the same object as it exists in the physical universe). Note: Charge is mental mass but not all mental mass is charge. For example, if you picture a chair in your mind, it does not necessarily have charge connected with it; however, it is mental mass.



MENTAL PICTURE See MENTAL IMAGE PICTURE



MENTION

1. to refer to or speak about briefly or incidentally; specify, as by name.



MENTIONED

1. referred to; remarked upon; spoken briefly of; specified by name.



MESS

1. a disorderly or confused collection or mass of things; jumble. 2. a state of embarrassment, trouble, or difficulty; muddle. 3. a disorderly, untidy, or dirty state of things.



MESSED UP (adjective)

1. confused; jumbled; in disarray. 2. troubled; bewildered; perplexed.



MESS UP (verb)

1. make a mistake; bungle; botch; goof.



MEST

1. the physical universe; a word coined from the initial letters of Matter, Energy, Space and Time, which are the component parts of the physical universe; also used as an adjective in the same sense to mean physical - as in “mest universe,” meaning the “physical universe.”



MEST BODY

1. the human physical body.



METAPHYSICS

1. the study of the ideas unexplained by the science of physics which deals with matter, energy, motions and forces. 2.the study of the ultimate reality of all things; the branch of philosophy that deals with first principles and seeks to explain the nature of existence or reality. 3. the theory or principles (of some branch of knowledge).



METER

1. the Clearing Biofeedback Meter. See also E-METER



METER CHECK

1. an action of testing, measuring or verifying the reaction of a student to subject matter, words, blocks to study, etc.; it is done by the Clearing Practitioner, using the Clearing Biofeedback Meter.



METER DEPENDENCE

1. a condition created by the Clearing Practitioner invalidating or poorly acknowledging the Preclear, wherein the Preclear finally decides that he needs the meter as an “ally” in convincing the Clearing Practitioner to accept his data; the Preclear depends on the meter to prove something to the Clearing Practitioner.



MIGHT

1. conditional sense of may suggesting less force or certainty; implies that which is possible or likely or probable.



MIMIC (verb)

1. to copy closely; imitate accurately.



MIND (verb)

1. to care about; to object to; to be concerned about.



MIND (noun)

1. a control system between the Being and the physical universe; a storage place for mental pictures and data; a computer; an instrument consisting of three aspects: the conscious, subconscious and superconscious.



MINE

1. the one or ones that belong to me.



MINUS RANDOMITY

1. anything which has too little motion in it for a person’s tolerance.



MINUS TONE SCALE

1. the sub-tones on the Scale of Emotional Expression (below 2.0) which are so low as to constitute by the individual a no-affinity, no-emotion, no-problem, no-consequence state of mind on things which are actually tremendously important.



MINUTE

1. a measurement of time representing 1/60 of an hour; 60 seconds.



MINUTES

1. plural of minute.



MIRACLE

1. an occurrence that contradicts the fixed belief system of a Being who is operating through the conscious mind or C-mind dwell. 2. a wonder or wonderful thing; something marvelous. 3. the usual result of a Being who is operating through the superconscious mind or B-mind dwell (miracles as usual). [Latin miraculum from mirari,to marvel at, from mirus, wonderful]



MIS-ACKNOWLEDGMENT

1. a failure to end the cycle of command.



MISASSIST

1. an incident wherein the Preclear has tried to help on some dynamic and failed.



MISCONCEPTION

1. a mistaken idea or notion; wrong conception.



MISDIRECTOR

1. a command from the Preclear’s bank which sends the Preclear in the wrong direction on the time track.



MISEMOTION

1. emotion which is irrational and inappropriate to the present time situation. 2. emotion which has been suppressed and which remains a part of an individual’s locks and secondaries unless he is Cleared.



MISEMOTIONAL (adjective)

1. showing irrational expression of emotion.



MISOWNERSHIP

1. mistaken ownership; a wrong ownership. 2. one Being thinking the charge is his when it belongs to someone else, or thinking it belongs to someone else when it is his own.



MISPROGRAMMED

1. mistakenly programmed; the current program has neglected or misplaced an urgently needed action.



MISRUN

1. not correctly run. 2. an error or mistake in the running of an incident or item.



MISS (verb)

1. to fail to see, hear, perceive, etc. 2. to overlook.



MISSED

1. overlooked. 2. failed to see, hear, perceive, etc.



MISSED PERPETRATION

1. a harmful act which no one found out about.



MISSED WITHHOLD

1. an undisclosed harmful act which has been reactivated by another but not disclosed; a withhold which another person nearly found out about, leaving the person with the withhold in a state of wondering whether his hidden deed is known or not. see WITHHOLD



MISSED WITHHOLD PROGRAM

1. an action in which the Clearing Practitioner searches for and finds when and where the withholds of a Preclear had been available but had been missed.



MISSING (adjective)

1. absent; lost; lacking.



MISTAKE

1. misunderstanding of a meaning or intention; misrepresentation. 2. error in thought, judgment or action; wrong choice or identification.



MISUNDERSTAND

1. to understand incorrectly; miscomprehend or misinterpret.



MISUNDERSTANDING

1. a failure to understand; mistake of meaning or intention.



MISUNDERSTOOD (noun)

1. [Slang] something that is incorrectly understood; a word or symbol whose meaning one has not fully grasped.



MISUNDERSTOOD WORD

1. a unit of language incorrectly interpreted which, when not found and cleared by an individual, will result in any number of manifestations, including blankness in the memory right after that word, drowsiness, confusion and/or dislike of the subject matter, irritated and burning eyes, aches and pains in various parts of the body, and a desire to get away from the subject, often followed by an actual departure from it; this phenomenon can occur at any time when language is being perceived by the individual, though it is most easily observed when one is reading.



MISWORDED

1. wrongly, incorrectly or inaccurately worded or stated.



MIXED

1. put together so that the components and parts of each are diffused among those of the others.



MOCKERY

1. to show or express scorn, ridicule or contempt. 2. an evil and covertly hostile imitating of or repeating after someone.



MOCK-UP

1. a mental model, construction or picture created by a Being; a mock-up is distinct from a mental image picture in that it is created volitionally, does not necessarily copy any previous experience and is under the control of the Being.



MODEL SESSION

1. the same exact pattern and script (patter) with which every Clearing session is begun and ended; the overall form of all Clearing sessions which is the same anywhere in the world.



MOISTURE PERCEPTION

1. the sense of dampness or dryness of the atmosphere which allows one to further judge his environment.



MOMENT

1. an indefinitely brief period of time; instant. 2. a definite point in time or in a series of events.



MOMENTS

1. plural of moment.



MONEY

1. a) standard pieces of gold, silver, copper, nickel, etc., stamped by government authority and used as a medium of exchange and measure of value; coin or coins: also called hard money. b) any paper note issued by a government or an authorized bank and used in the same way; bank notes; bills: also called paper money.



MOOD

1. a particular state of mind or feeling; humor, or temper; a temporary state of mind.



MOOD DRILLS

1. exercises designed to handle a condition wherein the Clearing Practitioner’s mood is negatively affecting a Preclear’s session or progress.



MORAL (adjective)

1. good in character or conduct. 2. capable of understanding right and wrong.



MORAL CODE

1. that series of agreements to which a person has subscribed to guarantee the survival of a group.



MORALITY (noun)

1. the relative right or wrong of an action. 2. doing right. 3. a system of morals; set of rules or principles of right and wrong.



MORALS (noun)

1. the principles of right and wrong conduct. 2. those things which are considered to be at any given time survival characteristics. 3. an arbitrary code of conduct not necessarily related to reason.



MORE (adjective)

1. greater in amount, quantity or degree; used as the comparative of much. 2. greater in number; used as the comparative of many. 3. additional; further.



MORES (noun)

1. folkways that are considered conducive to the welfare of society and so, through general observance, develop the force of law, often becoming part of the formal legal code.



MOTION

1. change of position or place; movement; moving.



MOTIVATOR

1. a perpetration or harmful act received by the individual. 2. the consideration and dramatization that one has been wronged by the action of another or a group and which is characterized by constant complaint with no real action undertaken to resolve the situation; this reveals that the motivator is being held in place to justify perpetrations committed by the individual; this is easily handled in Clearing.



MOTIVATOR HUNGER

1. the desire or intention to be hurt or injured so as to balance out previous or forthcoming perpetrations.



MOVE

1. to go from one point to another; proceed.



MOVING

1. going from one point to another; proceeding.



M/U

1. abbreviation for misunderstood word.



MULTIPLE ACKNOWLEDGMENT

1. more than one acknowledgment to end a cycle of communication, such as “OK, GOOD” or “ALL RIGHT, THANK YOU, FINE.”



MULTIPLE ILLNESS

1. a condition in which the Preclear is physically ill from several engrams of different types that are all reactivated.



MULTIPLE SOMATICS

1. several somatics as one item.



MUTTER CE

1. an exercise designed to perfect the muzzled Clearing Communication Cycle.



MUTUAL

1. a) done, felt, etc. by each of two or more for or toward the other or others; reciprocal: as, mutual admiration. b) of, or having the same relationship toward, each other or one another: as, mutual enemies. 2. shared in common; joint: as, our mutual friend.



MUTUAL OUT RUDS

1. a situation in which two or more people mutually have ruds out on the wider group or other dynamics and do not get them in.



MUZZLE (verb)

1. to prevent from talking or expressing an opinion; gag.



MUZZLED

1. prevented from talking or expressing an opinion; gagged.



MUZZLED CLEARING

1. a style of Clearing in which the Clearing Practitioner ONLY gives the command and acknowledges the answer to that command; only model session patter, commands and CEs are used; it is the stark total of CEs 0 - 4, with nothing else added; it always gets the best results. (also called “Rote Style Clearing”).



MUZZLED COACHING

1. a style of coaching in which the coach simply acknowledges a correct action by the student and otherwise is silent.



MYSELF

1. a form of the first person singular pronoun, used: a) an intensive, as: I went myself. b) as a reflexive, as: I hurt myself. c) as a quasi-noun meaning “my real, true, or actual self” (eg., I am not myself when I yell like that). 2. me.



MYSTERY

1. something that is hidden or unknown. 2. something that is not explained or understood. 3. the opposite of knowing. 4. a secret.



MYSTICAL MYSTIC

1. [Slang] a term used to describe a type of case in which the person will be totally reasonable about anything that happens in his vicinity but not do anything about itand see nothing but good in anything (e.g., a person who comes upon the scene of a fire and thinks it is good that the firemen have something to do).



MYSTIQUE

1. qualifications or skills that set a person or thing apart and beyond the understanding of an outsider.