Cults are more common than we may want to believe, but learning about them is the best way to limit their power and control over our community, our loved ones, and ourselves.
Institution: Buena Vista University
Alma mater: Purdue University
Many of us have a deep, personal drive to seek inner fulfillment. We want to grow as individuals, explore our own potential, and make an important and lasting contribution to the world. Itâs easy to run into groups that promise to help us along the way, and some of these groups are sincere. When a group, or even a charismatic individual, promises to help us meet our goals but then corrupts our good intentions for their own gainâwhen they exploit people in an organized fashionâthatâs when the situation turns into something destructive. Thatâs when you may have become a member of a cult. And it can happen much more easily than you might think.
In the 12 fascinating lectures of Warping Reality: Inside the Psychology of Cults, you will learn about some of the most widely known cults of modern times. But unlike any standard news reporting or documentary about groups like The Peoples Temple, the Manson âFamily,â the Branch Davidians, Heavenâs Gate, Children of God, Unification Church, or NXIVM, your expert, Dr. Wind Goodfriend, will help you explore the psychology of these cults. How could these cult leaders have committed such heinous crimes under the guise of âhelpingâ members in their development? And why is it so easy for cults to bring people into the fold?
There are thousands of cults in existence right now, so working to understand how cults operateâand why even skeptical, well-informed people can fall prey to their promisesâis a crucial undertaking for the sake of your safety and that of your loved ones.
Meeting Former Cult Members
In this course, you will not only learn about cults, but you will also meet two former cult members who are willing to share their stories. They explain what led them to join these groups, what they had hoped to get from the groups versus the reality, and why they each stayed for over a decade before walking away.
Youâll meet Alexandra Amor, author of the award-winning Cult, A Love Story, as well as numerous other books, both fiction and nonfiction. Alexandra discusses her involvement with a cult called The Circle located in British Columbia. When she joined, it seemed to be just a group of people who were all interested in spiritual growth, with a leader who could help guide Alexandraâs spiritual maturation.
Youâll also meet Tom Heinzen, a professor emeritus of psychology and author and coauthor of several books. Tom joined a group called Salem Acres in rural Illinois. It seemed to be a group of very loving people who were simply working the land of a rundown farm and building apartments. Alexandra and Tom eventually realized the groups they had joined were not for their benefitânot at all.
Dr. Goodfriend will introduce you to the âeight deadly sinsâ (identified by Robert J. Lifton) that are often used to characterize cults. These traits become more than simple bullet points or guidelines when revealed through the real-world experiences of Alexandra and Tom. The traits include:
The Psychology of Cult Leaders
Many books and documentaries have described cult leaders, but here you will dive below the surface to reach the âwhyâ of these charismatic and destructive individuals. What is the psychological profile of a cult leader? What are the personality traits or circumstances that contribute to the cult leaderâs rare ability to amass a loyal following and their malevolent mindset?
Most cult leaders suffered through a traumatic childhood. For those individuals, their childhood trauma left them with a pathological need to control everything and everyone in their environment as a way of avoiding that same hurt ever again. If that pathology is combined with the ability of a master manipulator, the individual can control a large following.
When analyzing the âwhyâ of a cult leaderâs behavior, you will consider three major psychological factors:
You Would Never Join a Cult ⌠Would You?
Chances are each of us is certain we would never join a cult. We like to think that we would never be so gullible as to give up all our possessions and freedoms simply because some fake guru told us to. We would never cut all communication with our family just because a charismatic grifter said our earthly ties were destroying our spiritual ascent. We would certainly never allow our children to be sexually abused by a self-proclaimed prophet who said it was for the benefit of the groupâs salvation.
And yet many thousands have done these thingsâand worse. In 1978, more than 900 members of Jim Jonesâ Peoples Temple were murdered (including 300 children) or committed ârevolutionary suicideâ because Jim Jones told them to.
We imagine cult members to be desperate, ignorant, hopeless individuals who would follow any leader and believe any doctrine. But that is not at all what social scientists have found. Instead, they have found that people who enter a cult are from all educational levels, religions, and economic and ethnic backgrounds. As a group, they are neither desperate nor ignorant.
While a common profile of a typical cult member doesnât seem to exist, cult members do seem to have several things in common. They tend to be:
It is not the cult members who were interested in cult membership to abuse and betray others, but it is the cult leader who has lied to, manipulated, and used their members in fraudulent and violent ways. Learning about cults, and the psychology of their leaders, is the best way to limit their ability to gain control over our communities, loved ones, and ourselves.
1Introduction to Infamy: Famous Cults
2What Defines a Cult: The Eight Deadly Sins
3The Destructive Nature of Cults
4The Psychology of Cult Leaders
5The Psychology of Cult Members
6Cult Recruitment and Seduction
7Obedience and Commitment inside Cults
8Having Your Sense of Self Stolen
9Cults as Abusive Love
10Escaping a Cult
11Aftershocks: Healing and Finding Closure
12Stories of Cult Survivors
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