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The Role of Cognitive Distortion
From
Captive Hearts: Captive Minds by
Madeleine
Tobias and
Janja Lalich, Hunter House, 1994; 101-103
Proponents of cognitive therapy, based on the work of Aaron
Beck and others, believe that by changing the way we think we can have a
profound effect on the way we feel.(6) In Feeling Good: The New Mood Therapy,
David Burns outlines 10 common mistakes in thinking, which he calls cognitive
distortions.(7) These distortions are explained here in the context of post
cult recovery.
1.
All-or-nothing thinking: Cults teach black-and-white thinking, such as
“Everyone outside the group is controlled by Satan or is evil,” “The leader is
God and cannot make mistakes,” “You must always strive for perfection in order
to reach the group’s goal.” Such thinking stifles personal growth and keeps a
person pitted against the rest of the world.
2.
Overgeneralization: Simply making one mistake can cause a person to leap
to the conclusion that the group’s predictions about dire consequences for those
who leave are indeed coming true. Former members often have difficulty allowing
themselves to make mistakes without hearing criticisms in their head. Reviewing
actions at the end of the day, no matter how simple, can help counterbalance the
internal cult “chatter.”
3.
Mental filter: cults teach people to dwell on their mistakes and
weaknesses. In many cults each day’s activities are reviewed, with
concentration placed on any “sins” or wrongdoing. All thoughts, feelings, and
behaviors are cause for criticism, prayer, and repenting. After such training,
a person may obsess about a small mistake and lose sight of the positive things
that are happening. Anything negative becomes a focus that filters out
everything else.
4.
Disqualifying the positive: One means of cult control is to not allow
members to take pride in their achievements. All that is good comes from the
Master, while members are made to feel stupid and inadequate. Making lists of
personal strengths and accomplishments may counteract this reaction.
5.
Jumping to conclusions: There are two forms of coming to a negative
conclusion, which are probably familiar to ex-members:
(a)
Mind reading: Those who were in New Age or Eastern cults may have been
led to believe that mind reading is real. This belief is used to make
assumptions about others. Doing the same now may be counterproductive. Don’t
jump to conclusions about another person’s actions or attitudes. Don’t
substitute assumptions for real communication.
(b)
Fortune telling: Cults predict the failure of their critics, dissenters,
and those who leave. Former members sometimes believe that depression, worry,
or illness is sure to hound them (and their family) forever. Remember, such
phobias and distortions have nothing to do with reality but have been instilled
by the cult.
6.
Magnification (catastrophizing) and minimization: Magnifying the
members’ faults and weaknesses while minimizing strengths, assets, and talents
is common. The opposite holds true for the leader. This trend has to be
reversed in order to rebuild self-esteem, although reaching a balanced
perspective may take time. Feedback from trustworthy, nonjudgmental friends may
be helpful here.
7.
Emotional reasoning: In groups that place emphasis on feeling over
thinking, members learn to make choices and judge reality solely based on what
they feel. This is true of all New Age groups and many transformational and
psychology cults. Interpreting reality through feelings is a form of wishful
thinking. If it really worked, we would all be wealthy and the world would be a
safe and happy place. When this type of thinking turns negative, it can be a
shortcut to depression and withdrawal: “I feel bad, worthless, and so
on, therefore I am bad, worthless, and so on.”
8.
“Should” statements: Cult beliefs and standards often continue to
influence behavior in the form of shoulds, musts, have tos, and oughts. These
words may be directed at others or at oneself-for example, thinking, “I should
get out of bed.” The result is feeling pressured and resentful. Try to
identify the source of these internal commands. Do they come from the former
cult leader? Do you really want to obey him anymore?
9.
Labeling and mislabeling: Ex-members put all kinds of negative labels on
themselves for having been involved in a cult: stupid, jerk, sinner, crazy,
bad, whore, no good, fool. Labeling oneself a failure for making a mistake (in
this case, joining the cult) is mental horsewhipping. It is an
overgeneralization, inaccurate, cruel, and, like the other cognitive
distortions, untrue and self-defeating. Labeling others in this way is equally
inaccurate and judgmental. If there must be labels, how about some positive
ones?
10.
Personalization: Burns calls this distortion “the mother of guilt.” A
primary weapon of mind control is training members to believe that everything
bad that happens is their fault. The guilt that accompanies this sort of
personalizing is crippling and controlling. You are out of the cult now, so it
is important only to take responsibility for what is yours.
These 10 cognitive errors are all habits of thinking that
are deeply ingrained by the thought-reform processes and cult indoctrination.
Tendencies toward these distortions may have been in place even before a
person’s cult involvement, which may have enhanced vulnerability to recruitment
and increased susceptibility to the cult’s practices. Given the habit of these
kinds of destructive thinking patterns, is it any wonder that former cult
members sometimes feel depressed? The good news is, like any habit, these
patterns of thinking can be broken and discarded through awareness and practice.
Captive
Hearts,
Captive
Minds:
Freedom
and
Recovery
from
Cults
and
Abusive
Relationships
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