ICSA E-Newsletter
Vol. 4, No. 3
August 2005
Born or Raised in High-Demand Groups:
Developmental Considerations
An increasing number of
individuals are entering mainstream society who
were born and/or raised in cults or closed,
high-demand groups. In my work as a mental health
professional specializing in trauma and recovery
from spiritual abuse, I regularly encounter these
individuals.
The bulk of literature on
recovery from cults is focused primarily on those
who entered such groups as young adults. While
much of this information is quite beneficial to
those raised in cults or abusive groups, it does
not address some important key issues that
significantly impact this unique population. In
this paper I will define some key terms used to
understand the dynamics and structure of cults or
closed, high-demand groups, explore some of the
literature on early trauma and its impact on
brain development, look at the normal processes
and goals of childhood development, and analyze
how cultic environments, which are often
traumatic, might impact development. The ideas
which I present on child development in cultic
environments are theoretical and developed as a
result of information gathered from interviews
with approximately ten adults who were born
and/or raised in either Christian-based or
eastern religious-based groups, as well as from
clinical work with four such individuals,
consultation with parents who raised children in
such groups, and ongoing observations and
interactions with former members who were born
and/or raised in such groups.
Much has been written about
how to assess whether a particular group or
relationship is abusive or cultic, and just what
these terms mean, including work by Singer &
Lalich (1996), Tobias, Lalich (1994) and Langone
(1993). As a former member of a “closed
high-demand group” (CHDG), I often struggle with
terminology and prefer not to use the term
“cult,” though it sometimes is unavoidable.
Langone and Chambers (1991) found that many
former members have similar feelings and prefer
such terms as “spiritual abuse” or “psychological
manipulation.” In this paper I will primarily use
“closed high-demand group(s)” (CHDGs) when
speaking of cults or abusive, manipulative groups
or relationships in which deception and mind
control are used to gain power over members.
Characteristics of CHDGs
According to Tobias and
Lalich (1994, p.13) the following characteristics
are often present in these environments:
·
Members are expected to be
excessively zealous and unquestioning in their
commitment to the identity and leadership of the
group. Personal beliefs and values must be
replaced with those of the group.
·
Members are manipulated and
exploited and may give up their education,
careers, and families to work excessively long
hours at group-directed tasks such as selling a
quota of candy or books, fund-raising,
recruiting, and proselytizing.
·
Harm or threat of harm may come to
members, their families and/or society due to
inadequate medical care, poor nutrition,
psychological, physical, or sexual abuse, sleep
deprivation, criminal activities, etc.
Margaret Singer and Janja
Lalich (1995), who have done vast amounts of work
in the cult field, state that such groups have
the following characteristics:
·
Authoritarian power structure
·
Totalitarian control of members’
behavior
·
Double sets of ethics (one for
leader and another for members; one for those
inside the group, another for outsiders)
·
Leaders that are self-appointed and
claim to have a special mission in life
·
Leaders who tend to be charismatic,
determined and domineering
·
Leaders who center the veneration
of members upon themselves
Robert Jay Lifton (1961), a
psychiatrist and pioneering researcher in the
thought reform, or mind control, field, has
proposed that the following eight features create
environments of “ideological totalism”:
1.
Milieu control—the control of
communication within an environment; this creates
unhealthy boundaries
2.
Mystical manipulation or
“planned spontaneity”—experiences which appear to
be spontaneous are actually orchestrated in order
to demonstrate “divine authority,” which enables
the leader(s) to use any means toward a “higher
end” or goal
3.
The demand for purity—absolute
separation of good and evil within self and
environment
4.
The cult of confession—one-on-one
or group confession of past and present “sins” or
behaviors, which are often used to humiliate the
confessor and create dependency upon the leader
5.
Sacred science—the group's
teaching is portrayed as Ultimate Truth that
cannot be questioned.
6.
Loading of the language—use of
terms or jargon that have group-specific meaning,
phrases that will keep one in or bring one back
into the cult mindset.
7.
Doctrine over person—denial of
self and self-perception.
8.
Dispensing of existence—anyone
not in the group or not embracing the “truth” is
insignificant, not “saved” or “unconscious”; the
outside world and members who leave the group are
rejected.
Children in CHDGs
Markowitz and Halperin
(1984) discuss the vulnerability and abuse of
children in cults. A child's parent, who is in a
dependent, regressive state due to being under
the influence of the group's leader(s), “is prone
toward abusive practices” (p. 154) and power over
children is often the only power this parent may
have. Most adults in CHDGs live in a state of
unpredictability, in that one never knows when
the “axe will fall” and the member will be
disciplined (shunned, put in the “hot seat”, lose
privileges, etc.).
When a parent’s life is
unpredictable, the parent’s behavior toward the
child is also unpredictable with regard to
support, neglect, or anger. This unpredictability
impedes the child's ability to develop a sense of
safety or consistency in his or her view of the
parent and the environment. When the parent is
unpredictable or the parent dissociates (is
psychologically absent while physically present),
the child’s ability to perceive whether there is
danger or safety is impaired and the child
becomes hypervigilant, or super organized around
assessing the state of the parent. This may
trigger a “freeze” response in the child in which
the child dissociates. Dissociated parents may
trigger dissociation in infants. In addition, in
CHDGs children are often separated from their
parents at an early age (two years old - five
years old) and placed in collective environments
where another adult or adults assume educational
and child-rearing responsibilities. Rochford
(1999) says that in ISKCON (International Society
for Krishna Consciousness) children were
separated from their parents at age four or five
to be raised by others because parents tend not
to be strict enough with their own children. The
ISKCON schools (gurukulas) became the children’s
primary environment and they spent only brief
periods with their parents during the year.
Tragically, this system compromised the safety of
many children who suffered from physical, sexual,
and emotional abuse while in the care of their
teachers. It is important to note that ISKCON
has made significant changes in recent years to
increase safety for children, though this does
not diminish the negative impacts on those who
were not protected for many years. The Sullivan
Institute/Fourth Wall (SI/FW), which was a
psychoanalytic and political group, instituted
the practice of separating children as young as
three years old from their parents, “the
rationale being the less exposure there was to
parents, the better the child’s mental health
would be” (Siskind, 1999, p. 59).
Children who grow up in such
environments are at-risk for many significant
issues, including but not limited to:
·
lack of an appropriate, consistent
caretaker;
·
lack of healthy attachment to
appropriate caretaker;
·
lack of adequate medical care;
·
isolation;
·
physical abuse;
·
physical neglect;
·
sexual abuse;
·
educational neglect;
·
lack of intellectual stimuli;
·
unrealistic expectations that
children participate in adult activities, such as
meditation, fasting, sexual activity; and
·
suppression of developmental tasks.
The parents of children in
CHDGs are often thought-reformed to believe that
normal human feelings for their children, such as
love, concern, and attachment, are not
“spiritual” or that these feelings dilute the
group’s higher or special purpose. Children, who
are naturally striving to accomplish normal
developmental tasks such as identity, safety and
independence, are labeled “possessed,” crazy, or
bad. The parents’ confusion, the negative labels,
and the overt and covert negative messages
children receive about their worth and safety are
all factors that contribute to traumatic
experiences for them. In turn these early
traumatic experiences interfere with healthy
attachment and negatively impact the child’s
ability to develop and mature in healthy ways.
Reber (1996), cites Bowlby,
who defines attachment as a “lasting
psychological connectedness between human beings”
(p. 83). Bowlby (in Reber 1996) says that
attachment is a fundamental building block for
human development, and describes the bond between
mother (or other consistent, appropriate
caretaker) and infant as critical to healthy
development. Also, in Reber (1996) Waters,
Posada, Crowell and Lay state that “children who
have secure attachments are ‘inoculated’ from
adverse outcomes throughout development” (p.84).
Lack of healthy attachment, then, is truly a very
traumatic beginning for any child. Early problems
with attachment can have long term negative
impacts, including “skew[ing] the developmental
trajectory of the right brain over the rest of
the life span” (Shore, 2002 p.24). Schore (2002)
states that the right brain is “dominant for
attachment, affect regulation and stress
modulation” (p. 2), and he further states that
“the organization of the brain’s essential coping
mechanisms occurs in crucial periods of infancy”
(p.26). Van der Kolk, McFarlane, and Weisaeth
(1996) say that
(t)rauma early in the life cycle fundamentally
effects the maturation of the systems in charge
of the regulation of psychological and biological
processes. The disruption of these
self-regulatory processes makes these individuals
vulnerable to develop chronic affect
dysregulation, destructive behavior against self
and others, learning disabilities, dissociative
problems, somatization and distortions in
concepts about self and others. (pp. x-xi).
In a presentation on trauma
in Denver, Colorado (January 26, 2001) Van der
Kolk said that alcoholism and religious
fanaticism are two prime factors that increase
the likelihood of child abuse. The resultant lack
of early, healthy attachment can lead to clinging
or detachment in interpersonal relationships.
Normal Development
There are many models of
human development. Because safety and trust are
the foundation for healthy development and
because Erik Erikson’s (1950) model is simple and
clear I’ve chosen to use his model of
developmental stages as a template. Erikson’s
eight stages are summarized in the following
table:
|
Stage |
Period in which
development is most pronounced |
|
Trust vs. mistrust
(hope) |
Infancy |
|
Autonomy vs. shame
(will) |
Toddlerhood |
|
Initiative vs. guilt(purpose) |
Preschooler "play age" |
|
Industry vs.
inferiority (competence) |
Elementary school age |
|
Identity vs. diffusion
(fidelity) |
Adolescence |
|
Intimacy vs. isolation
(love) |
Young adulthood |
|
Generativity vs.
Self-absorption (care) |
Middle adulthood |
|
Integrity vs. despair
(wisdom) |
Older adulthood |
Each stage of development
has its “tasks” which are building blocks or the
foundation for each subsequent stage. If the
emotional and physical needs of the child are
adequately met, the child appropriately completes
the task, i.e., learning to trust, learning to
develop autonomy, etc. If the child’s needs are
NOT adequately met, the child can still move on
to the next stage, but his or her emotional and
mental well being is compromised and subsequent
tasks, as well as relationships, can become more
difficult to complete. For the purposes of this
paper I will give an overview of the first five
steps, covering the life span from infancy
through adolescence. The negative outcomes are
based on the work of Bryant, Kessler, & Shirar
(1992).
Infancy - Hope
Learning to trust
one’s environment and caretakers: “My needs are
okay,” “I’m important.”
If abuse and/or neglect
occur the child develops mistrust in the
environment and caretakers. “My needs are not
okay,” “I’m not important.”
Negative outcome -
Mistrust, anxiety
Toddlerhood - Will
Learning autonomy:
personal control of one’s body and doing things
on one’s own. The child begins to separate from
caretakers: “I am me, you are you.”
If separateness is punished,
a sense of engulfment or abandonment results. The
child learns shame and doubt. “I can’t do
it,” “I feel out of control,” “I am bad.”
Negative outcome -
Shame, doubt, helplessness, anxiety,
overcompliance vs. hyperactivity
Preschool Age - Purpose
Learning initiative,
to have confidence in self, to explore in safe
environment; trusting that caretakers will be
there when needed.
When taught that risk-taking
or initiative will cause harm to self or others,
guilt develops: “I’m to blame,” “I am
responsible for others feeling good or bad”.
Negative outcome -
Role reversal, hypervigilance, guilt, anxiety
Elementary School Age - Competence
Learning to feel
competent about one’s own abilities in social
and intellectual activities; continued process of
healthy separation from caretaker, with support
and boundaries.
If support and encouragement
are lacking child develops a sense of
inferiority about abilities and self: “I
can’t think/act for myself,” I’m stupid/wrong.”
Negative outcome -
Inferiority, anxiety
Adolescence - Fidelity
Establishing separate
identity; gradual increasing of level of
responsibility and freedom throughout the teen
years.
Constrictive or nonexistent
boundaries (too many or too few directives,
guidelines) cause role confusion,
lack of identity, inability to
differentiate.
Negative outcome -
Anxiety, emotional enmeshment; extreme
fluctuations in behavior and mood - extreme
acting out (drugs, sex, legal problems), or
compulsive conformity and over-achievement. Can
become paralyzed with feelings of inferiority.
Development and Trauma
According to John Briere
(1996) there are three primary self-capacities
that develop in normal early childhood. These
are:
- Identity—which
provides a consistent sense of personal
existence and enables the individual to respond
from an internal sense of security. Unstable
identity may cause an individual to become
easily overwhelmed.
- Boundary—awareness
of separation between self and others. Those
with poor boundaries tend to allow others to
intrude upon them, or they intrude upon others.
This can lead to a lack of awareness of
personal rights to safety and/or difficulty
with interpersonal relations.
- Affect regulation—which
includes: (a) affect modulation
(self-soothing techniques to reduce or change
painful emotion) and (b) affect tolerance
(ability to experience negative affect without
resorting to external destructive or
self-destructive behaviors or “acting out").
Briere (1996), citing
Bowlby, says that these self-capacities help
establish a sense of internal stability, a secure
psychological base from which to interact with
the world. In the context of sustained external
security, which is provided in the relationship
between child and primary caretaker, the child
learns to deal with occasional uncomfortable
experiences and internal states, which leads to a
continuous building of a stronger set of internal
resources and sense of self (Briere, 1996).
Sustained external security is not present
in an abusive or neglectful environment. In such
an environment, “the overwhelming stress of
maltreatment [whether it is abuse and/or neglect]
is associated with adverse influences on brain
development” (deBellis, Baum, Birmaher, Keshavan,
Eccard, Boring, Jenkins, & Ryan), cited in
traumapages.com/schore (2002). This is known as
relational or interpersonal trauma. Early
relational trauma has a significantly greater
negative impact than non-relational trauma (such
as from a natural disaster, accident, etc.) over
the lifespan. Relational trauma is usually
“complex” trauma.
John Briere (1996) says that
complex trauma is characterized by the following:
·
Onset – usually involves or
includes childhood
·
Duration – prolonged
·
Frequency – multiple exposures
·
Relational – usually interpersonal
·
Complexity – multiple victimization
modalities (neglect, physical, sexual, medical,
emotional, etc.)
Mary Sue Moore, a clinical
psychologist and researcher who has done much
work and research on patterns of attachment in
infants and children, says that early trauma
activates the brain stem which can lead to
hypersensitivity to the environment and induce a
fight, flight, or freeze response. This brain
stem activation makes it very difficult, if not
impossible, to think oneself out of the traumatic
response (personal communication, 2002).
Over the long term, infants
and children who dissociate in order to cope with
traumatic experiences often become adults who
dissociate when faced with traumatic or
significantly stressful situations. Adults with
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) may regress
to their younger developmental stage and coping
modality in stressful situations. The adult,
then, is again in a state in which he or she
cannot think his or her way out of the situation.
Ogawa, Sroufe, Weinfield, Carlson, & Egeland,
cited in traumapages.com/shore (2002), found that
“early trauma more so than later trauma has a
greater impact on the development of dissociative
behaviors” (section titled: continuity between
infant, childhood, and adult ptsd). The brain
itself is negatively impacted. Early, pre-verbal
experiences, including traumatic experiences are
sensorily stored with the smells, sensations and
motor activity present during the experiences.
Those who suffer from Post-Traumatic Stress
Disorder can be triggered through the senses to
these earlier, traumatic experiences.
Development in CHDGs
The next step is putting
this information together and examining
child development using Erikson’s model (1950) in
the context of a thought reform program, using
Lifton’s model (1961) and Bryant, et al’s theory
of the negative messages children internalize in
an unsafe environment (1992).
Milieu Control—the
control of communication within an environment;
builds unhealthy boundaries. Parents may be given
directives about parenting do’s and don’ts: Don’t
hold children; don’t respond to their cries; Do
keep them quiet; Don’t be attached to them. The
message children receive is “my needs are not
okay” or “I am not important” “I am not safe”
which is essentially dispensing of existence.
Infants learn that they cannot trust that
their needs will be met.
Mystical Manipulation—“divine
authority” mandates dysfunctional and/or abusive
parenting. This authority allows any means toward
a “higher end” or goal. Verbal and non-verbal
messages are given to infants that interfere with
the development of trust.
Demand for Purity—absolute
separation of good and evil within self and
within the environment. Good children behave in
proscribed ways and do not “act” like children.
Children are often forced to participate in
rituals that are not age-appropriate. Shame
and doubt interfere with development of
autonomy or the belief that it’s okay to
think and feel for oneself.
The Cult of Confession—one-on-one
or group confession (by child or on behalf of
child) for the purpose of humiliating the
confessor and creating dependency upon the leader
for one’s definition of goodness. Humiliation
discourages risk-taking; the child develops a
sense of guilt and is fearful of
exhibiting initiative.
Sacred Science and
Doctrine over Person—the teachings of the
CHDG and/or leader is the Ultimate Truth that
allows for no questioning. The individual is
always inferior to the Ultimate Truth of
the group or leader(s). This necessitates denial
of self and self-perception. When parents or
caretakers encourage a child to become
self-directed the child develops a sense of
competence. The inability to question or to
value one’s own ideas lead to the development of
inferiority. The child is always secondary
to the doctrine or leader(s).
Dispensing of Existence—anyone
not in the group or not embracing the “truth” is
insignificant, not “saved,” or “unconscious”; the
outside world or members who leave the group are
rejected. The developmental tasks of adolescents
are to separate from their caretakers and create
their own identity. This cannot be done
without thinking for oneself and adopting one’s
own set of values. Yet to do so in a cultic
environment is tantamount to rejecting “Truth”.
The only way to survive is to dispense of self.
Loading of the Language—use
of terms, jargon that have group-specific
meaning; phrases that will keep one in, or bring
one back into, the cult mindset. In the case of a
child growing up in a thought reform environment
theses meanings are the only ones the child will
learn. The loaded language is the child’s
first language. Upon leaving the group an
adolescent or adult questions his or her
competence at understanding the language,
behaviors, and customs of the culture.
Judith Herman, in her widely
respected book Trauma and Recovery (1992)
states that
(r)epeated trauma in adult life erodes the
structure of the personality already formed, but
repeated trauma in childhood forms and deforms
the personality. The child trapped in an abusive
environment is faced with formidable tasks of
adaptation. She must find a way to preserve a
sense of trust in people who are untrustworthy,
safety in a situation that is unsafe, control in
a situation that is terrifyingly unpredictable,
power in a situation of helplessness. Unable to
care for or protect herself, she must compensate
for the failures of adult care and protection
with the only means at her disposal, an immature
system of psychological defenses (p. 96).
Losses
I have conducted interviews
with a number of adults who were raised in CHDGs.
In addition to developmental deficits, these
individuals identify a myriad of other personal
losses. These include, though are certainly not
limited to:
childhood, self, family, God, meaning, sustaining
beliefs, language, identity, learning capacities,
problems sustaining relationships, problems
reading social cues.
Many of these former members
describe deep feelings of shame, guilt,
isolation, doubt, confusion, and mood swings. The
following statements express some of the
difficulties faced:
“I
felt, and continue to feel, like a stranger in a
strange land.”
“I
had no pre-cult self, lacked basic survival
skills, had/have many relational issues, had lack
of understanding of normal human emotions and
expression, lacked critical thinking skills, and
needed to re-define ‘normal’.”
“Everywhere I went upon leaving the cult I
tripped up on my own undone developmental work.”
“I
will be in recovery for the rest of my life. The
damage I suffered was profound.”
“It was deprivation, abuse and developmental
lack.”
“Lots of re-defining of terms, i.e. good bad,
etc. I had to come to grips with the sad,
apparent truth that good people suffer losses all
the time.”
“I
had no reference to go back to – this has been
the most difficult piece. I had to give up all
the meaning I had learned – everything I learned
was wrong. Accepting this is the key to my
recovery.”
Recovery
Though recovery will not be
explored in depth in this paper, it is important
to have an overview of the recovery process.
Martin (1993) discusses stages of recovery
following cultic experiences. These stages are
similar, though with a unique twist for those
born or raised in CHDGs because there is no
pre-cult identity to go back to, so I have
modified Martin somewhat (e.g., "re-evaluation"
becomes "evaluation", “reintegration” becomes
“integration”). The stages are:
·
Evaluation of the
experiences - often in tandem with finding a
support network, including any former members
and/or extended family who have been on the
outside; education on cults/mind control;
therapy; reading; journaling
·
Reconciliation/Adaptation,
Conciliation – moving slowly, taking small
steps; explore redefining of terms; set small
goals, tend to personal health; discover personal
strengths
·
Integration – occurs over
time
There are many things that
will likely impact the success and degree of
recovery. Developmental tasks of safety and trust
are paramount, and are usually not quickly or
painlessly achieved. Rosanne Henry, a licensed
professional counselor who works with cult
survivors says that “we can’t expect to do
recovery the way we do cults,” (personal
communication 2004) meaning that there are no
magic bullets or quick fixes, and that time,
patience, and self-care are very important. This
cannot be emphasized enough. In the cult recovery
field one of the theories is that most people, at
times of vulnerability, are susceptible to being
indoctrinated into a CHDG, and that one need not
come from a dysfunctional family or have
family-of-origin issues to have become involved
in such a group. Treatment usually focuses on the
cult experience first, and then family-of-origin
issues, if there are any. In the case of those
born or raised in CHDGs the two are inseparable
and must be dealt with simultaneously. Since the
trauma is relational and occurs over time, the
individual may be dealing with complex PTSD, and
professional help may be important for
understanding and decreasing the symptoms.
Healing is a process, and
adaptation and integration occur over time. It is
very important to remember that human beings are
resilient. As one begins to experience small
successes and builds a foundation of personal
strengths and skills, one’s sense of safety
begins to expand. As one’s sense of safety
expands, so do self-confidence, autonomy,
initiative, and identity, just as in the normal
process of healthy childhood development.
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