There are some crucially important points to keep in mind when dealing with cult members. Here are two of these points:
- They will lie to you
- They will let you down and leave you stranded
I learned this from personal experience, experience for which I later found independent confirmation online and in books.
Lying
Not only do cult members conceal much of the truth about their organisation, they will also often lie about it, brazenly and repeatedly.
I am not talking here about people on the periphery who don’t know anything so pass on wrong information in all good faith, nor am I talking about members who are so confused and in such a terrible state that they no longer know the difference between truth and lies: I am talking about people who lie knowingly and deliberately.
They will lie about their beliefs and practices and procedures inside the organisation, denying for example that members are obliged to hand over their earnings and take part in auditing sessions where they are forced to give sensitive personal information and confess to misdeeds.
They will dismiss allegations made against the cult, saying that they come from liars, enemies and traitors.
They will brazenly lie about where donated money is going, saying for example that it will help children when much of it really goes to buy support from politicians and pay the travelling expenses of a rent-a-crowd mob.
They will lie about the purpose of an impending gathering, saying for example that it is entertainment when it is really political.
Saturday, 17 March 2018
Saturday, 10 March 2018
Leaving a cult - much easier said than done
“Why don’t they just leave when they find out
what they have got into?”
It is much easier to ask why people
don’t just leave when they learn what happens behind the scenes in a cult or
cult-like organisation than it is to find acceptable and comprehensible answers.
It is not easy for outsiders to understand the external pressures and
techniques and internal thought processes that keep people inside.
The best sources of answers and
explanations are ex-members. They are the ones with the excruciatingly painful
personal experience of cult life, and some of them may be able to explain what
was going on in their minds and in their lives in terms that ‘civilians’ can
understand.
The deeper in that people go, the worse life often gets but the harder it is for them to
get out. I am not talking about people on the fringes and in the outer circles
who may wander in then drift away or drop out: I am talking about long-term,
hard-core members.
I am also mainly
talking about people who might think about leaving, not those few who genuinely
feel at home in their organisation or the large number of unfortunates who have
lost all sense of self and self-preservation.
People
are discouraged and prevented from leaving
The message
given, overtly or covertly, to many cult members is, “Don’t you dare leave, you
traitor. It will be much the worse for you if you do!”
Cults make it difficult for members to leave in as many
practical, guilt and fear-based and emotional blackmailing ways as possible. They
use manipulation, intimidation and coercion to keep dissenting members in line.
Labels:
brainwashing,
cult leaders,
cult members,
cults,
ideology
Thursday, 21 December 2017
Life after leaving a cult: predictable paths people take
There is a lot of information available about
cults, cult-like organisations, cult leaders and cult members and ex-members. I
compiled some ideas and information myself from personal experience, ideas for which my researches found much independent confirmation.
I made posts on a
forum that no longer exists. I want to overhaul the material and put a few
extracts on here, in the hope that they will be of use to someone.
I will start at the end, with a short account
of what I know about people who have left one of these sinister organisations.
Groups most cult leavers fall into
Many people who leave a cult just want to recover
and get on with whatever lives they can make for themselves, perhaps after
telling their stories to a few people.
A few high-profile people may expose the
practices and describe their experiences mainly for the money, attention and
publicity. I am thinking of celebrity ex-members of organisations such as
Scientology here. One of them has a TV show.
Then there are those who go into the
mechanics of cult leadership and operation in great detail. They take action on
an intellectual level. They do a lot of reading and research and consult a
variety of sources. They want to understand what forces were at work, mainly
for their own benefit. They may also hope to educate others and deter them from
joining; some write very helpful books and articles. This is possibly the best
option, but not everyone has the necessary resources.
Most ex-members will think that they are
lucky to be out of it, but a few may feel lost and miserable and blame
themselves for not being able to meet the (unrealistic) requirements and
(outrageous) demands. They feel that they failed to make the grade. They feel
inferior, not good enough for the elite organisation. They have let the leader
and the cause down.
They have been expelled from Paradise and the
gates locked behind them. They may be unable to cut their losses and move on
with their lives, even when they have support, options and opportunities. They
may feel even worse than they did when inside. They may be very depressed and
just give up on life. Someone once explained all this to me when I asked about
people who had left, but not spoken out against, a cult.
Labels:
brainwashing,
cult members,
cults
Saturday, 4 November 2017
L. Ron Hubbard and Charles Fort: a problem in common
I have noticed that not only do some people
not get what they wanted, hoped for or expected, but they may also get exactly
what they didn’t want.
One example is when people who want a specific
type of audience, follower or reader attract exactly the wrong sort of person.
By coincidence, I came across two examples of
this phenomenon just a few hours apart, while I was looking into something
else.
I read this about L. Ron Hubbard:
“Hubbard wanted to attract explorers and men
of the world. Instead, he ended up with science fiction fans.”
I read this about Charles Fort:
“Fort’s horizons were boundless and in his
day he lamented that ‘the majority of people attracted are the ones we don’t
want; Spiritualists, Fundamentalists’.”
Very amusing, and rather sad.
It reminds me of an army recruitment centre I
often passed; their window display attracted the attention of lots of children
and old ladies, but I never saw any young men looking at it!
Labels:
Charles Fort,
L Ron Hubbard
Monday, 28 August 2017
Benjamin Disraeli: Imperium Et Libertas, death and primroses
Benjamin Disraeli died on April 19th, 1881.
Protocol did not permit Queen Victoria to
attend his funeral, but she sent two wreaths of primroses with a simple message
attached: “His favourite flowers.”
She used to dispatch many bunches of
primroses from Osborne House, her holiday home on the Isle of Wight, to
Disraeli, for which he always thanked her effusively. Perhaps he was just being
polite; perhaps he really did like primroses more than any other flower.
Queen Victoria sent primroses to Disraeli’s
grave at his home in High Wycombe on each anniversary of his death until 1901,
when she herself died.
Some people allege that by ‘his’, Queen
Victoria meant Prince Albert’s!
Either way, because of what she wrote and
sent, primroses became associated with Disraeli’s name and were featured in two
legacies, Primrose Day and The Primrose League.
Primrose Day
On the first anniversary of Disraeli’s death,
many people in London wore primroses in their hats and buttonholes as a tribute
to the great statesman who had done so much for his country and the British Empire.
This established a tradition; for decades
to come April 19th was Primrose Day, which became an unofficial national
holiday until the First World War.
On the day, people made pilgrimages to
Disraeli’s grave and to his statue near the Parliament that was his Mecca.
As late as 1916, Pathé News filmed the laying
of a wreath of primroses at Disraeli’s statue outside the Palace of
Westminster.
No other Prime Minister’s death has been
honoured in this way.
Monday, 21 August 2017
Benjamin Disraeli: progressing in politics
Benjamin Disraeli has been called the most
gifted Parliamentarian of the 19th century and a first class orator, writer and wit.
Twice Prime Minister, he played a major part
in the creation of the modern Conservative Party. He also made the Tories the
party most identified with the glory and power of the British Empire: he
brought India and the Suez Canal under the control of the British crown.
Reading in Disraeli: a Personal History by Christopher Hibbert about Disraeli’s rise from relative
obscurity to international renown and what he called ‘the top of the greasy
pole’ makes me wonder how he did it, why he did it and which, if any,
subterranean forces were at work to move him into such a high position. These
articles are a record of my attempts to understand what was going on and to
answer those questions.
Getting in: the political party lottery
Although Disraeli may have decided on a
political career in 1826, he didn’t do much about it until 1832. This was after
his return from the Grand Tour of Europe and the Orient, a tour that restored
him to health.
His long term goal was to become Prime
Minister.
The first step in this direction was to get
into the House of Commons as a Member of Parliament. This entailed deciding which of the three
political parties to campaign for.
The Tory, or Conservative, Party was considered
to be worn out at the time, a lost cause, and Disraeli didn’t want to attach
himself to a falling star; he couldn’t bring himself to be a Whig (who became
the Liberals), so in 1832 he decided that he would campaign as a Radical.
After making a few unsuccessful attempts to
get into Parliament by standing as an Independent Radical, in 1835 Disraeli
changed his political affiliations and campaigned as a Tory.
For Disraeli, the end was much more important
than the means; he felt that he had to do whatever it took to reach his goal.
He was in no position to have scruples. Perhaps he changed parties because he
felt that time was running out; he was going nowhere with the Radicals so had
not got much to lose by joining the Conservatives.
He lost a by-election in 1835. He was then
offered the safe seat of Maidstone, and easily defeated his Whig opponent in
the general election of 1837.
He was in! He had finally made it at the age
of 32. His decision to switch parties had paid off.
Saturday, 19 August 2017
Benjamin Disraeli: getting started in politics
Disraeli: a Personal History by Christopher
Hibbert is just one of the many available biographies of Benjamin Disraeli,
Prime Minister and Earl of Beaconsfield. It is the only one that I have read in
full.
I read it because I hoped to find more examples
of unseen influences at work in Disraeli’s life. I finished it feeling slightly
disappointed as I did not find many examples of what I was looking for.
I also felt a little disillusioned; the great
statesman felt drawn to Westminster not by a vocation or calling, not by principles,
ideology or any sense of public service but by self-interest, inordinate
ambition and vanity. The desire for fame and the need to make his presence felt
at the highest levels of society were Disraeli’s main reasons for entering
politics. He decided that a political career was the best route for getting
where he wanted to go.
The immunity of Members of Parliament from being
arrested for debt had something to do with it too.
With information from the book and some that I found online, I have enough relevant and inspiring
material for another article or two about this fascinating man.
Paving the way for the great destiny to come
Benjamin Disraeli’s father Isaac (D’Israeli)
had all of his children baptised into the Church of England, although he himself
never abandoned Judaism. Benjamin was 12 years old when Isaac took this unusual
step, which was fortunate for him as otherwise he would never have been able to
have a political career.
Predictions of the great destiny to come
I was amused to learn that Disraeli played
Parliament games with his siblings as a boy. He was Prime Minister and the
others were the Opposition.
In Disraeli’s autobiographical novel
Contarini Fleming - A Psychological Romance, which was published in 1834 before
he was even a Member of Parliament, Contarini’s father makes a prophecy that
his son will become Prime Minister of some great state.
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