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Reflections on Post Cult
Recovery
by Michael Langone, Ph. D.
On July 22-24, 1994, AFF conducted an "After the Cult" recovery
workshop at the St. Malo Retreat Center in Estes Park, Colorado.
Carol Giambalvo, Nancy Miquelon,
Hal Mansfield, Rosanne Henry,
and I organized the workshop and served as presenters, as did
David Clark. It was the first in the Denver area and was
extremely well received by the participants. The insightful and
moving discussions inspired me to write down some of the
reflections inspired by the workshop. I wish to share these with
you.
As the workshop participants made very clear, the subjective
essence of the cult experience is psychological abuse, and
betrayal in particular. Cults ostensibly offer to fulfill
commonly experienced human needs for understanding, certainty
and self-esteem. They provide an absolutist triad of
black-and-white answers to life's problems, a refusal to
entertain doubts about those answers, and a promise of being
superior to everyone outside the group. Youth and individuals
experiencing stress (which includes nearly everyone at some
point in their lives) are most likely to be attracted to groups
offering this triad. If vulnerable persons encounter a
sufficiently persuasive or seductive cultic group at the right
time in their lives, they may indeed join, (I presume that there
is a range of groups varying from mildly to extremely persuasive
and that people will differ in their susceptibility to
particular group ‘pitches'.) When they join, the members expect
benevolence, respect, love, help, etc. What they receive is very
different.
The reason is twofold.
First, the absolutist triad is an
illusion. It moves people away from reality and genuine human
connections. It is the opposite of what one could call the
adaptive triad: a questioning mind possessed of a healthy
measure of doubt (discernment), tolerance of ambiguity (no
black-and-white answers), and a humble yet critical openness to
the meaning systems of other people. Thus, to the extent cults
try to deliver the absolutist triad (and they try very hard),
they come into conflict with the inexorable demands of the human
condition.
The second reason cults don't deliver the benevolent results
they promise is their tendency to manipulate and exploit their
members (groups that aren't manipulatively exploitative are not
cults). Cults employ subtle processes of thought reform (also
called coercive persuasion and mind control) to recruit members
and to maintain them in systems that exploit members' needs
while promising to fulfill those needs. Thought reform is not
all-powerful, as some sensationalized media imply. Nor do all
groups employ it to the same extent. But it can be remarkably
successful in causing large numbers of persons to spend years in
social systems that are harmful and sometimes extremely abusive.
Most persons ultimately leave cults, or are ejected from their
groups. Research suggests that members leave when they become
disenchanted with the group's inability to deliver on its
promises, become disillusioned with the hypocrisy or fraudulent
practices of the group's leadership, are separated from the
group for a period of time, or are able to discuss doubts and
concerns with an intimate. A majority appears to be troubled by
the experience, while some are devastated. We can only speculate
on how many are troubled but unable to acknowledge or recognize
their own pain.
The core of this distress is the sense of having been abused by
persons thought to be benevolent, that is, of having been
betrayed. When they leave their groups many members feel
‘spiritually raped,' violated at the core of their beings. With
physical rape, it severely damages the capacity to trust --
oneself, others, and God. Ironically, ex-cult members find
themselves most in need of the illusory comfort of the
absolutist triad when they realize that they have been betrayed
by those promising this triad (that is why, perhaps, so many
persons will join a cultic group after leaving another.) If they
have insight sufficient to resist the lure of the absolutist
triad, they will understandably feel empty, depressed, guilty,
and painfully unsure of what or who is real and trustworthy and
even how to discover what or who is real and trustworthy. In the
most extreme cases they are in a state of psychological
bankruptcy in which all feelings are tinged by the sourness of
betrayal. They must begin anew when they have nothing to grab
hold of and no idea about where to turn for help.
That so many do indeed recover is a testament to their courage
and enduring capacity to love. Although some manage to pull
themselves together without substantial outside assistance, the
sharing at the after-the-cult workshops highlights the value of
knowledgeable support. The ex-members who have made it out of
psychological bankruptcy say to those still suffering: "There is
a way out. You can trust again. Hold my hand." Instead of the
absolutist triad of black-and-white answers, they offer the
adaptive triad of discernment, tolerance, and humility. Instead
of giving abuse and humiliation, they give respect and love.
Instead of advocating unrealistic standards that guarantee
failure, they advocate and model a humble, step-by-step approach
to solving problems. This step-by-step approach is the pathway
out of distrust and paralyzing doubt.
Ex-members' first step on this pathway is often to reconnect to
their pasts by reflecting upon those times when they did trust
themselves and others. If they can also watch, record, and
review their progress, and especially if they hold on to loving,
understanding hands, ex-members can, over time, come to believe
in the predictability of their self-respect (i.e., the tendency
to treat oneself as deserving of kindness instead of guilty
recriminations) and competence (including their imperfect
capacity to judge what is real and good) -- they will come to
trust themselves.
Increased trust in oneself makes it easier to trust others
because the latter requires discernment, and discernment
presupposes confidence in (trust in) one's own cognitive
competence. But developing trust in others is also vital to
increasing trust in oneself, for the affirmation of respected
others is the most effective antidote to the sometimes crippling
self-doubt ex-cult members often experience. That is why many
ex-members needs to lean on others (e.g., family) for a period
before they can begin to show signs of independence.
Developing trust in others may be viewed metaphorically as
developing a well-differentiated array of concentric circles
representing the varying levels of closeness into which a
discerning self allows others. These circles express the
psychological boundaries that distinguish a person from others.
In a cult these boundaries are dissolved as the individual is
pressured to identify with and merge into the group persona.
Once out of the cult, ex-cult members must learn not only how to
reestablish boundaries, but how to reestablish (or for some
people, establish for the first time) appropriate boundaries.
Who should be allowed into the inner circle? Who into the
mid-range? Who should be kept at the periphery? Who should be
excluded? These decisions require discernment and the courage to
experiment in a social world that, though not nearly as abusive
as the cult, contains abuse as well as respect and love. Having
the help of caring and knowledgeable people who model
discernment and courage and offer understanding and a helping
hand can be invaluable to ex-cult members hesitatingly trying to
reach out to others.
Reestablishing trust in God can be even more difficult than
reestablishing it in oneself and other. (The following
reflections may not apply to those persons who feel no need for
a relationship with God, for example, because they do no believe
in God or are agnostic. However, at AFF workshops many, if not
most, ex-members consider spiritual issues to be the most
pressing of all.) First of all, God is often associated with
religion, and most ex-members who have approached clergy or
religious institutions for help have been deeply disappointed.
Secondly, ex-cult members have had a compelling personal
experience of evil, and they angrily ask how a loving God could
have permitted their spiritual rape while they sought Him so
fervently. Religions do not convincingly answer the problem of
evil, of which the ex-cult member's experience is a special
case, mainly because the explanations they offer tend to presume
a faith in the God whose existence the experience of evil calls
into question. The explanations may satisfy believers, but they
offer little consolation to those whose contact with evil has
left them doubting God's existence.
Thus, ex-cult members frequently feel abandoned by God or turn
away from Him when they most need Him. Their tendency is to
place their suffering before the "God who might be there" and
say: "If you exist, and if you are indeed a loving and merciful
God, you'll understand why I cannot trust you now. I have been
savaged by lies, and more than anything I need truth, even if
only one crumb at a time. As much as I would like to believe and
trust in you, I will not allow myself to be deceived again. So
please give me time. If you can't respect this, then you don't
exist." It appears that as their trust in themselves and others
increases, most ex-cult members eventually reconcile with God,
although nearly half, according to a survey I conducted, still
tend not to identify with any religious denomination.
Those ex-cult members who do not lose their faith in God have a
divine hand to hold during their struggle to rebuild trust in
themselves and others. The "God who is there" is there for the
psychologically bankrupt as well as the psychologically
affluent. Thus, ex-members tortured by free-falling self-doubt
can humbly turn to God and pray for the courage and discernment
to reach out to those whom they hope genuinely care without
strings attached.
A bit of trust in God can lead to a bit of trust in oneself,
which in turn can lead to a bit of trust in others. But the
growth of trust is not unidirectional. Trust, whether in God,
oneself or others, breeds further trust -- provided that the
ex-cult member has the courage and wisdom to move one step at a
time and the good fortune to move toward people who behave
respectfully and with understanding. That first, vital spark of
courage must come from the mysterious depths of the ex-cult
member's soul. But after that first, lonely courageous step,
caring, knowledgeable others can give the encouragement that
motivates ex-cult members to quicken their pace and move forward
more and more confidently.
Acknowledgment: I am deeply grateful to all of the participants
at the St. Malo "After the Cult Workshop". Their eloquent
testimonies, questions, and affirmations of what is good in life
was inspiring and moving. I wish them my very best.
Michael D. Langone, Ph. D. Is a psychologist and the Executive
Director of the American Family Foundation (AFF). He is also the
Editor of the Cultic Studies Journal.
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