V



VACUUM

1. an empty space without even air in it.



VALENCE

1. the unwitting assumption by one individual of the characteristics of another individual. 2. another’s identity assumed by a person unknowingly; a valence is a substitute self taken on after the fact of lost confidence in self or a failed valence or as a solution to a problem. 2. a false or true identity; the Preclear has his own valence, his actual personality, and also available to him are the valences of all persons who appear in his engrams. 4. a commanded (from an engram) mimicry of another person or thing or imagined entity. 5. a beingness which the Preclear is not but is pretending to be or thinks he is. [Latin valens powerful from valere to be strong, have power]



VALENCE SHIFT

1. a realization in which the Preclear cognites on having been out of valence and returns to his own valence; a cognition on beingness, not doingness or havingness. see VALENCE



VALENCE SHIFTER

1. any phrase that indicates the individual should be somebody else. 2. a phrase which causes the individual to shift to another identity other than her own, such as, “You’re just like your mother.” 3. a list process to handle “out of valence.” see VALENCE



VALID (adjective)

1. having legal force; properly executed and binding under the law. 2. sound; well grounded on principles or evidence; able to withstand criticism or objection. 3. effective, effectual, convincing, etc.



VALIDATE (verb)

1. to give someone recognition and praise. 2. to make binding under the law; give legal force to; declare legally valid. 3. to prove to be valid; confirm the validity of.



VALIDATION (noun)

1. a recognition or praising of someone or something. 2. a making or declaring valid; proof; confirmation.



VALIDATION RECALL

1. a process of validating all the good moments of a Preclear’s past by having him recall them.



VALIDITY (noun)

1. the state, quality, or fact of being valid in law or in argument, proof, authority, etc.; (legal) soundness.



VALUABLE (adjective)

1. having material value; being worth money. 2. having great value in terms of money. 3. being highly thought of; being prized highly; being of great worth in some way, usually nonmaterial.



VALUABLE FINAL PRODUCT

1. an end result of an action or actions, the ultimate value of which is determined by the degree of benefit to the highest level of survival on all dynamics.



VALUE (noun)

1. that quality of a thing according to which it is thought of as being more or less desirable, useful, estimable, important, etc.; worth or the degree of worth. 2. a fair or proper equivalent in money, commodities, etc. for something sold or exchanged; fair price. 3. estimated or appraised worth or price; valuation.



VALUE (verb)

1. to estimate the value of; set a price for; determine the worth of; appraise. 2. to place a certain estimate of worth on in a scale of values: as, I value health above wealth. 3. to think highly of; esteem; prize.



VALUES

1. acts, customs, institutions, etc. regarded in a particular, especially favorable, way by a people, ethnic group. etc.



VALUED (adjective)

1. estimated; appraised. 2. highly thought of; esteemed.



VANISH

1. to stop existing; disappear.



VANQUISHED

1. defeated in any conflict, as in argument or competition. 2. conquered or defeated in battle; forced into submission.



VBI’S

1. abbr. for Very Bad Indicators.



VERBATIM (adverb)

1. word for word; in exactly the same words.



VERBATIM (adjective)

1. following the original word for word.



VERY (adverb)

1. in a high degree; to a great extent; extremely; exceedingly. 2. truly; really: used as an intensive, as, the very same woman.



VERY (adjective)

1. in the fullest sense; complete; absolute: as, the very opposite of the truth. 2. the same; identical: as, this is the very data I’ve been looking for. 3. even; even the: used as an intensive, as, the very rafters shook. 4. actual: as, the party started the very minute I arrived.



VERY BAD INDICATORS

1. bad indicators to a very marked degree. (see INDICATORS)



VERY GOOD INDICATORS

1. good indicators to a very marked degree. (see INDICATORS)



VERY WELL DONE

1. a phrase used in the evaluation of a Clearing Practitioner’s performance, based on specific criteria; namely, the Clearing Practitioner did the C/S, did a correct session, got a Floating Needle at exam and did the admin and next C/S correctly.



VFP

1. abbr. for Valuable Final Product.



VGI’S

1. abbr. for Very Good Indicators.



VIA

1. anything used to relay a communication. 2. anything a person uses to “confront with” (that is, instead of confronting), such as lighting a cigarette when uncomfortable or wearing dark glasses in order to feel apart from things.



VICTIM

1. someone injured, destroyed, or who has suffered loss or deprivation under any of various conditions; someone tricked; deceived, misled, imposed upon, or deluded. 2. a destroyed, or threatened with destruction, receipt point. 3. an unwilling and unknowing effect of life, matter, energy, space and time.



VIEW (noun)

1. a seeing or looking, as in inspection or examination. 2. sight or vision; especially, range of vision. 3. mental examination or survey; critical contemplation. 4. that which is seen; scene or prospect. 5. visual appearance or aspect of something. 6. manner of regarding or considering something; judgment; opinion. [Latin, videre, to see]



VIEW (verb)

1. to inspect; scrutinize. 2. to see; behold. 3. to survey mentally; consider.



VIEWPOINT

1. a point of awareness from which one can perceive. 2. that thing which an individual puts out remotely, to look through. 3. in terms of the analytical mind, a point from which one can be aware and can perceive; in terms of the reactive mind, it is actually an evaluation of a point from which one can be aware and can perceive, based on opinion, and a small amount of observation formed out of uncertainties.



VISIO

1. ability to see in mental image picture forms something one has seen earlier so that one sees it again in the same color, dimension, scale, brightness and detail as it was when originally viewed.



VITAMINS

1. any of a number of unrelated, complex organic substances found variously in most foods and essential, in small amounts, for the normal functioning of the body. [Latin, vita, life; + amine]



VOLUNTEER (noun)

1. a person who enters or who offers to enter in any service of his own free will.



VOLUNTEER (verb)

1. to offer or give of one’s own free will.



VOLUNTEERED

1. offered by one’s own choice.