Anyone who has participated in or read the stories from ex-Mormon, ex-Jehovah’s Witnesses, ex-Seventh-day Adventist, and countless other ex-high-control religious groups will recognize the term PIMO being thrown around constantly.
PIMO stands for Physically In, Mentally Out. It describes someone who still attends services, goes through the motions, and keeps up appearances — while their heart and mind checked out long ago. They’re not believers anymore, but they’re stuck pretending. Most of the time it’s to keep peace in the extended family, preserve a marriage, or wait until the kids are old enough to make their own decisions without being dragged to every church activity and youth-group hangout with their friends. The gravitational pull of that tight-knit community — or the sheer terror of losing it — often outweighs the desire to walk away free and clear.
This isn’t some rare quirk. It’s a feature, not a bug, of high-control groups.
In Jehovah’s Witnesses circles, PIMOs are practically a demographic. The organization’s shunning policy turns leaving into social and familial death. Walk away openly and your own parents or siblings may refuse to speak to you — even at a funeral. So thousands quietly attend meetings, nod along during talks about “the truth,” do the bare-minimum field service when required, and keep their doubts buried. They act the part to avoid being labeled apostates and cut off from everyone they love. It’s emotional blackmail packaged as “loving discipline,” and it works disturbingly well.
Over in Mormon (LDS) communities, the story is just as common. Ex-Mormon forums overflow with accounts of people who still show up to sacrament meeting, hold (or fake) callings, and keep paying tithing on paper — because openly questioning could cost them their “eternal family” sealings or trigger the cold shoulder from in-laws and ward members. “Cafeteria Mormons” take the selective route: they keep the parts they like (community, certain moral teachings) and memory-hole the rest (historical polygamy, Book of Mormon historicity, etc.). Smile, bear testimony when the script demands it, and maintain family peace at all costs.
Even among Seventh-day Adventists, you’ll find plenty of PIMOs and their “cafeteria” cousins. People dutifully keep the Sabbath, skip the pork, and show up for potlucks while privately rolling their eyes at Ellen White’s writings or the more rigid end-times predictions. They stay because leaving would disappoint Grandma, strain the marriage, or mean the kids lose their Adventist school friends and familiar routines. The social pressure is real, even without the formal shunning of the JWs.
Armstrongism has always been stuffed with these same PIMOs. That’s exactly why people still linger in the PCG, CCOG, COGWA, UCG, LCG, and RCG. Peer pressure does a lot of the heavy lifting, but there’s also the ever-present Armstrongist sword of Damocles: question too loudly or step out of line and your salvation gets revoked. Sound familiar? It’s the exact same threat used in Mormon, SDA, and JW circles.
Then comes the ultimate Armstrongist dagger: anyone who’s only physically present gets branded a Laodicean — lukewarm, spiritually lazy, and destined to be spewed out of God’s mouth. It’s a convenient biblical insult that lets the leadership dismiss doubters without ever having to address their actual concerns. “You’re just Laodicean” is Armstrongism’s version of “if you don’t like it, leave” — except leaving supposedly means losing your salvation.
Brilliant control mechanism, really.
PIMOs are often orthoprax to the core — at least on the outside. They follow the visible rules, dress the part, talk the talk, and perform the rituals so convincingly that no one suspects a thing. They look and sound exactly like the true believers.
Just like there are cafeteria Mormons and cafeteria SDAs, there are plenty of cafeteria COGers. They pick whichever Armstrong doctrines they can stomach, memory-hole the rest, and carry on. Most of the time it’s purely to keep the peace. Because in these environments, authentic belief is optional — visible compliance is mandatory.
These groups don’t actually want your genuine faith. They want your body in the pew, your mouth shut, and your checkbook open. When real conviction evaporates, they’ll happily settle for the performance. The “loving community” that supposedly values truth above all else is often the very thing making honest departure so expensive that people feel they have no choice but to fake it indefinitely.
PIMO life might be the only survivable option for many trapped inside these systems — but it’s still a slow, soul-eroding grind
No comments:
Post a Comment