Preliminary Four

The Path to Non-separation Equational Reading Rules

To translate an equation into an identity structure, perform the steps below.

Step 1: Locate the Central Operation

If there is one operation in the equation, it is the central operation.

If there are two or three operations in the equation, the operation outside of the singular circumscription(s) is the central operation.

Note that there is no central operation in Equation One, Personal Origin. For this equation, simply progress to Step 2.

Step 2: Identify the Blocks

If there is one operation in the equation, there is one block.

If there are two or three operations in the equation, there are two blocks. All elements and elementals to the left of the central operation are block one. All elements and elementals to the right of the central operation are block two.

Step 3: Practice the Existentials

If there is one block, read the equation from left to right, adding elementals and elements one by one and performing the corresponding practices. Each notational character you add creates a new existential (a partial identity structure.) The result of practicing the final existential of the block is a first-order operand, which is the identity structure experience you seek.

If there are two blocks, read the equation from left to right but skip the central operation and practice the two blocks individually (creating two separate first-order operands.) The result of practicing the final existential of each block will leave you experiencing two first-order operands that require further practice to experience the identity structure.

Step 4: Perform the Central Operation

Step 4 is needed only when you are experiencing two first-order operands simultaneously.

When you are experiencing two first-order operands, perform the central operation between the operands. The result is a second-order operand which is the identity structure experience you seek.