Hi dude,
Funky username, btw : ) I loved that movie.
...Okay there's definitely some confusion here because scores should all read FON and there is no 'W'.
So first, where is the phantom W coming from? Have we done a whoopsy and put it in the tutorials somewhere?
Second, if you've read all the tutorials you are probably going way too fast. They are not designed to be read so much as done (ie you read it, them you go and do the stuff to get the experience).
Consequently each tutorial takes an average student at least a month to go through, and by the end of the first 6 you should know stuff like, “What's the difference between attention, concentration, alertness, and focus?”; “What's the difference between emotion and sentiment?”; “What animal behaviors are associated with what transmitters?” and “How does anxiety shut down frontal lobes?”
And you should have new abilities; how to initiate the relaxation response, how to spot sentiment, how to recognize anxiety, what not to do with benzodiazepine, etc etc.
If you came in as an adept and you DO know all this already, we apologize that most of the stuff here so far is for beginners or intermediates. There are a lot more newbies than adepts, so necessity determines content.
Re: N6: You are probably already doing hacks for N6. The most beneficial hacks for N6 are anxiety reduction and input control, and of course eating, sleeping and behaving in ways that provide all the building blocks the brain needs to start increasing density. The tutorials should tell you that some hacks work for all networks.
There are not many specific hacks for front nets in the basics tutorials at all, because we work from the bottom up and by the time you've gotten N1,2 & 3 nicely balanced you'll notice that much of the front end has improved a lot all by itself! Often, problems just disappear. So by the time you get to working full time on frontal lobes you'll find there is a lot less to do, which is great news for all of us : )
All the heavy duty stuff happens right here, because in order to improve front nets, we have to improve rear ones, as that's what they depend on. Balancing N1&2 frees up resources for N6, so when you are working on the rear end you are improving the whole brain. It's much quicker to improve this way than going in top down. Think of it as working to strengthen the foundations of a great building that you can them build better walls and ceilings for and finally the roof. Then you can augment it with bullet-proof glass etc : )
Usually, anxiety reduction by itself will stop most frontal wronguse in its tracks. If snapback keeps happening, you need to look more closely at input control. By the time you've done the first 6 tutorials, you should know enough to understand what sort of things N6 is doing that constitute the 'wronguse'. As soon as you know that, you can hack N6 by input control. Type of wronguse is always individual and cannot be predicted by others from a distance; you have to get to 'know yourself' and your life context well enough to see what any network is doing that it shouldn't be.
A big clue for most of us: The dominant network will often cause wronguse in other nets by hijacking them for its own purposes. So input control is indeed very powerful and the more you do it, the more opportunities to do it will occur to you. Unless you have a specific problem or condition, that should be adequate for keeping any rogue network behavior under control while you improve.
Sorry; another long mail! Hope it helps.
Best,
AR