Thursday, January 24, 2019

Leaving the COG and the Personal Trauma It Can Cause



by Marlene Winell

Religious Trauma Syndrome is the condition experienced by people who are struggling with leaving an authoritarian, dogmatic religion and coping with the damage of indoctrination. They may be going through the shattering of a personally meaningful faith and/or breaking away from a controlling community and lifestyle. RTS is a function of both the chronic abuses of harmful religion and the impact of severing one’s connection with one’s faith. It can be compared to a combination of PTSD and Complex PTSD (C-PTSD). This is a summary followed by a series of three articles which were published in Cognitive Behaviour Therapy Today.

Religious Trauma Syndrome has a very recognizable set of symptoms, a definitive set of causes, and a debilitating cycle of abuse. There are ways to stop the abuse and recover.

Symptoms of Religious Trauma Syndrome:

Cognitive: Confusion, poor critical thinking ability, negative beliefs about self-ability & self-worth, black & white thinking, perfectionism, difficulty with decision-making

Emotional: Depression, anxiety, anger, grief, loneliness, difficulty with pleasure, loss of meaning

Social: Loss of social network, family rupture, social awkwardness, sexual difficulty, behind schedule on developmental tasks

Cultural: Unfamiliarity with secular world; “fish out of water” feelings, difficulty belonging, information gaps (e.g. evolution, modern art, music)

Causes of Religious Trauma Syndrome:

Authoritarianism coupled with toxic theology which is received and reinforced at church, school, and home results in:

• Suppression of normal child development – cognitive, social, emotional, moral stages are arrested

• Damage to normal thinking and feeling abilities -information is limited and controlled; dysfunctional beliefs taught; independent thinking condemned; feelings condemned

• External locus of control – knowledge is revealed, not discovered; hierarchy of authority enforced; self not a reliable or good source

• Physical and sexual abuse – patriarchal power; unhealthy sexual views; punishment used as for discipline

Cycle of Abuse

The doctrines of original sin and eternal damnation cause the most psychological distress by creating the ultimate double bind. You are guilty and responsible, and face eternal punishment. Yet you have no ability to do anything about it. (These are teachings of fundamentalist Christianity; however other authoritarian religions have equally toxic doctrines.)

You must conform to a mental test of “believing” in an external, unseen source for salvation, and maintain this state of belief until death. You cannot ever stop sinning altogether, so you must continue to confess and be forgiven, hoping that you have met the criteria despite complete lack of feedback about whether you will actually make it to heaven.

Salvation is not a free gift after all.

For the sincere believer, this results in an unending cycle of shame and relief.

Stopping the Cycle

You can stop the cycle of abuse, but leaving the faith is a “mixed blessing.” Letting go of the need to conform is a huge relief. There is a sense of freedom, excitement about information and new experiences, new-found self-respect, integrity, and the sense of an emerging identity.

There are huge challenges as well. The psychological damage does not go away overnight. In fact, because the phobia indoctrination in young childhood is so powerful, the fear of hell can last a lifetime despite rational analysis. Likewise the damage to self-esteem and basic self-trust can be crippling. This is why there are so many thousands of walking wounded – people who have left fundamentalist religion and are living with Religious Trauma Syndrome.

Mistaken Identity

Religious Trauma Syndrome mimics the symptoms of many other disorders –

post-traumatic stress disorder
clinical depression
anxiety disorders
bipolar disorder
obsessive compulsive disorder
borderline personality disorder
eating disorders
social disorders
marital and sexual dysfunctions
suicide
drug and alcohol abuse
extreme antisocial behavior, including homicide


There are many extreme cases, including child abuse of all kinds, suicide, rape, and murder. Not as extreme but also tragic are all the people who are struggling to make sense of life after losing their whole basis of reality. None of the previously named diagnoses quite tells the story, and many who try to get help from the mental health profession cannot find a therapist who understands.

What’s the problem?

We have in our society an assumption that religion is for the most part benign or good for you. Therapists, like others, expect that if you stop believing, you just quit going to church, putting it in the same category as not believing in Santa Claus. Some people also consider religious beliefs childish, so you just grow out of them, simple as that. Therapists often don’t understand fundamentalism, and they even recommend spiritual practices as part of therapy. In general, people who have not survived an authoritarian fundamentalist indoctrination do not realize what a complete mind-rape it really is.

In the United States, we also treasure our bill of rights, our freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, and freedom of religion. This makes it extremely difficult to address a debilitating disorder like RTS without threatening the majority of Americans. Raising questions about toxic beliefs and abusive practices in religion seems to be violating a taboo. No one wants to be pointing fingers for fear of tampering with our precious freedoms.

But this is the problem. Sanitizing religion makes it all the more insidious when it is toxic. For example, small children are biologically dependent on their adult caretakers; built into their survival mechanisms is a need to trust authority just to stay alive. Religious teachings take hold easily in their underdeveloped brains while the adults conveniently keep control. This continues generation after generation, as the religious meme complex reproduces itself, and masses of believers learn to value self-loathing and fear apocalypse.

There is hope

Awareness is growing about the dangers of religious indoctrination. There are more and more websites to support the growing number of people leaving harmful religion. Slowly, services are growing to help people with RTS heal and grow, including Journey Free. We are discovering the means by which people can understand what they have been through and take steps to become healthy, happy human beings.

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What it means to leave

Breaking out of a restrictive, mind-controlling religion is understandably a liberating experience. People report huge relief and some excitement about their new possibilities. Certain problems are over, such as trying to twist one’s thinking to believe irrational religious doctrines, handling enormous cognitive dissonance in order to get by in the ‘real world’ as well, and conforming to repressive codes of behavior. Finally leaving a restrictive religion can be a major personal accomplishment after trying to make it work and going through many cycles of guilt and confusion. 
However, the challenges of leaving are daunting. For most people, the religious environment was a one-stop-shop for meeting all their major needs – social support, a coherent worldview, meaning and direction in life, structured activities, and emotional/spiritual satisfaction. Leaving the fold means multiple losses, including the loss of friends and family support at a crucial time of personal transition. Consequently, it is a very lonely ‘stressful life event’ – more so than others described on Axis IV in the DSM. For some people, depending on their personality and the details of their religious past, it may be possible to simply stop participating in religious services and activities and move on with life. But for many, leaving their religion means debilitating anxiety, depression, grief, and anger. 
Usually people begin with intellectually letting go of their religious beliefs and then struggle with the emotional aspects. The cognitive part is difficult enough and often requires a period of study and struggle before giving up one’s familiar and perhaps cherished worldview. But the emotional letting go is much more difficult since the beliefs are bound with deep-seated needs and fears, and usually inculcated at a young age. 
Problems with self-worth and fear of terrible punishment continue. Virtually all controlling religions teach fear about the evil in ‘the world’ and the danger of being alone without the group. Ordinary setbacks can cause panic attacks, especially when one feels like a small child in a very foreign world. Coming out of a sheltered, repressed environment can result in a lack of coping skills and personal maturity. The phobia indoctrination makes it difficult to avoid the stabbing thought, even many years after leaving, that one has made a terrible mistake, thinking ‘what if they’re right?’
It is truly amazing the pain I went through due to what was inputted into my mind… All I know is it took such a toll on me that I did not care if I died and went to hell to escape the hell I was in and the immense fear it put into my life.
Depression, anxiety, fatigue, insomnia, etc... you name it. It sucks. Probably from years of guilt being a Christian and a sinner, and thinking people I love are in hell.
Making the break is for many the most disruptive, difficult upheaval they have ever gone through in life. To understand this fully, one must appreciate the totality of a religious worldview that defines and controls reality in the way that fundamentalist groups do. Everything about the world - past, present, and future – is explained, the meaning of life is laid out, morality is already decided, and individuals must find their place in the cosmic scheme in order to be worthwhile. The promises for conformity and obedience are great and the threats for disobedience are dire, both for the present life and the hereafter. Controlling religions tend to limit information about the world and alternative views so members easily conclude that their religious worldview is the only one possible. Anything outside of their world is considered dangerous and evil at worst and terribly misguided at best. So leaving this sheltered environment is bursting a bubble. Everything a person has believed to be true is shattered. 
My foundation has truly dropped out from under me. Despite being told I am courageous, tenacious, and this is rugged work, I consistently find wave after wave of grief that overwhelms me. I can hardly believe how upended it has made my life.
My whole sense of purpose, value, and meaning was wrapped tightly around my Christian faith...I kept my doubts buried and crucified, and I tried hard not to think about the troubling things of faith...A year ago, I abandoned evangelicalism...the pain I feel is deep and raw. 
The impact can create problems with day-to-day functioning. 
The amount of inner turmoil during this time was overwhelming. It affected my daily life and many days I didn’t want to get out of bed. I was depressed and anxious at the same time. Being in college was difficult. I could hardly focus on class.
I am utterly confused and at the moment my whole life is ruined as I don't know what to think. I've been off work a month with anxiety. 
I have - for about three years - been dependent on drinking alcohol every night for a very long time.

22 comments:

Anonymous said...

Awareness is growing about the dangers of religious indoctrination. There are more and more websites to support the growing number of people leaving harmful religion.

What we need is just as many websites to deal with the many other forms of indoctrination that we are subject to.

Anonymous said...

There are too many words to read.

Tonto said...

All of these symptoms happen to many when there is drastic change in their life. Leaving the military, daath of a spouse, retirement, disability etc.

There is an element of disillusionment and grief. Religious disillusionment is perhaps the most profound, as religion provides some sort of "umbrella coverage" that "all things work for good" and that the other discouragements of life are temporary and will be resolved in the "great eternal scheme of things".

I believe that to be true, and I do find comfort in that. However, it is when religion becomes the supposed personification and human representation of that God, disillusionment is assured and guaranteed. Many people do not realize that Jesus came to destroy a religious hierarchy and to liberate people from it.

Cults don't really want to go to deeply into the idea of "the veil being torn in the temple" and that each of us now has direct contact to the throne of God thru Christ and Christ alone! Churches create dependence, and control is always based on need!

Im sure that when the slaves were liberated, most of them did not know what to do, and frankly just continued on with their masters. The same thing occurs in the COGs today. To escape from it and to be free is disillusioning , scary, and a great mental stress. Leadership is lonely, but living a life of illusion, illogic and lies, is not much better than being addicted to a chemical substance.

Anonymous said...

I recently read several books on abusive Christianity. What stood out is the level of control these groups acquire over their members. Peoples desire to please God and live by the Bible is hijacked and used to rob them of their lives. There's no other way of putting it. Life isn't just being physically alive. Rather it means exercising certain responsibilities. These responsibilities are slowly snatched away, typically using the frog in a increasingly hotter container principle.
It's de facto murder. It's rare for secular groups to achieve this same level of control.

Al Dexter said...

It took quite a while for me to cast off all the nonsense and fears. It came by stages. I threw off the rigmarole of Sabbaths and holy days rather soon. Same for prophetic superstitions. The nonsense of unclean foods took a little longer. It took over twenty years to cast all superstition aside and embrace science and secular humanist atheism. For a while I basically returned to the sceptic I'd been before age 18. A lot of study and research came along the way, and the wonder of computer based research has been invaluable.

Anonymous said...

It's rare for secular groups to achieve this same level of control.

Unless we consider governments who can conscript people and send them off to war, and do plenty of other controlling things.

Anonymous said...

There are degrees of leaving the Church.

You might be surprised to know how many current attendees have long ago left the Church, in that they no longer believe much of what the Church teaches, yet stay around because they have nothing better or because it is all they have ever known. For some time, I have been one of those people. You would almost certainly know my surname, but you might or might not know my full name.

For deeply personal reasons, I cannot yet leave the Church physically, in the sense of "no longer coming to services" and "publicly acknowledging my disbelief in HWA and his teachings." I plan to do so as soon as I can, but must first take care of some family matters so that I do not end up trapped in the group as my parents are. Ideally, I hope that when I leave I can give my parents a safety net, so they may feel safe and financially stable in retirement, able to speak freely about their experiences. If I spoke out about corruption in my splinter, nobody would care, as I would not be able to say much more than has already been said on this blog. Although maybe 1/5 of the accusations about my group on this board are either false or exaggerated, a substantial majority are true, but nobody on the inside would care about my opinion any more than RCG members seem to care about what Dave Pack's children have said over the years. If my parents, however, spoke openly about their experiences, it might make people take notice, and might even motivate some current members to leave. That is why I am staying for the moment, while making arrangements to leave.

Gordon Feil said...

A big part of the problem is that people don't really know what God is like and they don't believe Romans 8 which starts with no condemnation and ends with no separation. If people can realize that God loves them no matter what, then the fear leaves. Life, in or outside of a church, can be approached confidently.

Anonymous said...

It is not traumatic to leave being in the company of people with evil hearts.
Evil hearts are the real root of all the troubles in WCG and it's off shoots.

If your pastor has an evil heart there will always be war, injustice, cronyism, white lies and money issues abounding.

Faith is to be cast out with evil hearts, jealously and hatred sprinkled with lies will rule and abound.

Beware of the evil hearts.

Anonymous said...

5.58 PM
Studies have shown that the "unfreeze/freeze" brainwashing doesn't stick once soldiers leave the military. The control is short term.

Anonymous said...

Gordon Feil,

Very good and timely sharing for me who is still steeped in Armstrongism and struggling to get out. I have always liked Romans 8 for its inspiring message about God's love. You gave a new insight regarding "no condemnation and no separation". Awesome!

Anonymous said...

It's rare for secular groups to achieve this same level of control.

Employers can destroy your reputation and your career because you wouldn't break the law for them or cheat for them. And you often have no recourse. Lawyers are too expensive and you can't always prove your case even if you are right.

Anonymous said...

Even the leaders have often mentally "checked out" while taking big paychecks and filling prominent roles.

Would it be much harder for Dr. Doug Winnail to write a fresh 200 words appropriate to each week? Instead, he takes the time to go through an archive of old messages, then finds one he likes... but instead of honestly reusing it he changes a very few words around to make it harder for a searcher to find the old one and see that it was reused. That's not just laziness. It's active shirking of new thought. For reference, here's LCG's June 27, 2013 update, containing the same "Comments" from Winnail as he used in this week's January 24, 2019 update:

June 27, 2013

Compare the first two sentences from 2013 with the first two sentences from this week:

2013: In today’s world, many people are motivated by a personal quest for a position, power, prestige, pleasure and a paycheck—and a failure to be acknowledged or acclaimed is hard for some people to deal with. Sometimes this even spills over into the Church and local congregations when individuals jostle for positions and seek to be noticed or given positions and responsibilities.

2019: In our world today, many people are motivated by a personal quest for a position, power, prestige, pleasure or a paycheck—and failure to be acknowledged or acclaimed is hard for some to deal with. Sometimes this attitude even spills over into the Church and local congregations when individuals jostle for positions and seek to be noticed or be given positions and responsibilities.

My boldfacing calls attention to the trivial differences between the two items. It doesn't make sense to me that someone would reuse his old material yet make only such superficial changes. Re-using would make sense, and revising would make sense. Trivial rewording just looks sneaky and strange. Intellectually and pastorally, has Dr,. Winnail left his job?

Tonto said...

ANON AT 10:42--- HWA constantly repeated himself and droned on about personal stories that were told hundreds of times, or gave the same "2 Trees" sermon over and over. Winnail is no different than Rod Meredith, who ENDLESSLY, spoke and wrote the same things over and over, such as his wart healing, and being a "Gold Gloves Champion" et al.

TLA said...

The retirement program at LCG is work until you die - retiring while working keeps paying the bills and free travel is included.

Gordon Feil said...

Feel free to get in touch with me, and maybe together we can resolve your problem.

Gordon Feil said...

That's what happens when there is no accountability and when salaries of church workers exceed the average of the lay members.

Anonymous said...

TLA said...

The retirement program at LCG is work until you die

Like Karl Beyersdorfer?

Anonymous said...

This is Dave Pack
A reminder that my church members are to work until they die as well. So keep that tithe money rolling in. And be sure to tithe on your coffin and funeral.
Money, Money, money. I love the stuff. Can't get enough of it. Uncle Scrooge is my idol.

Unknown said...

One of the toughest things to cope with when leaving a Church you were heavily invested in is loneliness. Imagine 90% of your friends and associates are in the church that you left. Only thing worst than being depressed is being both depressed and alone.

Anonymous said...

"One of the toughest things to cope with when leaving a church you were heavily invested in is loneliness."

Unfortunately, for some of us, Armstrongism killed the ability to have close friendships or relationships with others. 1). We were taught that loyalty to friends came secondary to loyalty to the church. This naturally gave rise to conditional love, and judgementalism. 2). With friends and relatives outside the church you could not become emotionally invested. You "knew" what the Germans were soon going to do to them. 3) In an ACOG, Sartre's saying "Hell is other people" was very much true. You never knew when the ministers were going to swoop down on you with unfounded accusations and overkill, and you never knew which of your "friends" were informing on you.

I learned to really enjoy solitude while I was in Armstrongism, and that skill set has persisted throughout my subsequent life. Most of the achievers and heroes that I admire most in movies and television are loners, focused on the job they have to do.

Anonymous said...

I was forced to grow up in this church and left as soon as I was able… I was denied any sort of support from my parents since I left… i am treated like I am evil by other family members since I left. Although they all seem to have severe psychological problems as a result of the crazy Armstrong beliefs that we were forced to listen to…
the psychological affect that this sort of religious abuse has on the children is unconscionable and it can ruin their life… I hope that other victims of this horrific cult are able to get the help they need!