Wednesday, January 1, 2014

The Minimum Ingredients Needed to Exit a Cult

Conditions needed for a person to leave a high control group:

1. Courage.  A person must be very brave to leave a high control group.  It's no easy task to choose to abandon your entire life and start anew alone.  Cultists often face loss of job, residency, family and friends if they leave.

2. Critical thinking.  A cultist must be ready to think logically.  He doesn't have to think 100% logically about every single thing, but he must reach the critical mass of logical, honest examination of one's beliefs and a desire to verify and believe facts.

3. Strong desire to have a more authentic, happy life.  Again, he will need a critical mass of a desire to change.  This could come from a decreased willingness to continue one's high control lifestyle, or there could be an immediate motivator, such as a major bullying incident or scandal.

4. Humility.  It takes honesty with oneself and a willingness to admit, to oneself and others, that he was wrong. 

In my experience, if a person does not have enough of all four of these, he will either not leave at all, or he will relapse after a brief soiree into normal life. The latter will be used by him as evidence that leaving is the wrong thing to do.

I recommend any efforts to help someone exit are all focused on increasing the above four conditions.  Doctrinal debates and other in-depth critiques of the group can provide Condition #3, but alone they will definitely fall sort of effecting change.

Sunday, December 29, 2013

Wash. Woman Accused of Forcing Granddaughter to Hold Bible Over Head to Expel 'Demon'

Wash. Woman Accused of Forcing Granddaughter to Hold Bible Over Head to Expel 'Demon'

Saturday, September 28, 2013

Jehovah's Witness teen loses appeal over life-saving transfusion

Jehovah's Witness teen loses appeal over life-saving transfusion

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Comedian Makes Up Story About Satanism, Becomes National Expert

5 Insane Scams That Should Have Failed (But Didn't) | Cracked.com

Any of you who were in a fundamentalist religion in the 1980s probably remember the Great Satanic Cult Scare.  This article gives some great insight into how it started--it was a complete scam from the beginning!  An interesting study into how lies can foster hysteria and orthodoxy.


One would like to believe, in this Modern Era, Salem-style hysteria would not occur.  And yet it does. 

As this article points out, human nature still contains within it the potential to continue to believe something that has been proven false.

The first thing I remember is the McMartin preschool case.  I remember absolutely nothing of the fundamentalists admitting the accuser had paranoid schizophrenia, or that the accusations were implausible.  I remember it being used as a tool to scare members into huddling closer to the cult.  One defendant spent years in jail prior to being acquitted.

The mess also had its dire consequences upon psychiatry.  Recovered memory therapy” did damage to countless people.

Critical thinking is surely one of the most important things humanity can accomplish.