
* spontaneous crying
* sense of loss
* depression & suicidal thoughts
* fear that not obeying the cult’s wishes will result in God’s wrath or loss of salvation
* alienation from family, friends
* sense of isolation, loneliness due to being surrounded by people who have no basis for understanding cult life
* fear of evil spirits taking over one’s life outside the cult
* scrupulosity, excessive rigidity about rules of minor importance
* panic disproportionate to one’s circumstances
* fear of going insane
* confusion about right and wrong
* sexual conflicts
* unwarranted guilt
The period of exiting from a cult is usually a traumatic experience and, like any great change in a person’s life, involves passing through stages of accommodation to the change:
* Disbelief/denial: “This can’t be happening. It couldn’t have been that bad.”
* Anger/hostility: “How could they/I be so wrong?” (hate feelings)
* Self-pity/depression: “Why me? I can’t do this.”
* Fear/bargaining: “I don’t know if I can live without my group. Maybe I can still associate with it on a limited basis, if I do what they want.”
* Reassessment: “Maybe I was wrong about the group’s being so wonderful.”
* Accommodation/acceptance: “I can move beyond this experience and choose new directions for my life” or...
* Reinvolvement: “I think I will rejoin the group.”
Passing through these stages is seldom a smooth progression. It is fairly typical to bounce back and forth between different stages. Not everyone achieves the stage of accommodation / acceptance. Some return to cult life. But for those who do not, the following may be experienced for a period of several months:
* flashbacks to cult life
* simplistic black-white thinking
* sense of unreality
* suggestibility, ie. automatic obedience responses to trigger-terms of the cult’s loaded language or to innocent suggestions
* disassociation (spacing out)
* feeling “out of it”
* “Stockholm Syndrome”: knee-jerk impulses to defend the cult when it is criticized, even if the cult hurt the person
* difficulty concentrating
* incapacity to make decisions
* hostility reactions, either toward anyone who criticizes the cult or toward the cult itself
* mental confusion
* low self-esteem
* dread of running into a current cult-member by mistake
* loss of a sense of how to carry out simple tasks
* dread of being cursed or condemned by the cult
* hang-overs of habitual cult behaviors like chanting
* difficulty managing time
* trouble holding down a job
Most of these symptoms subside as the victim mainstreams into everyday routines of normal life. In a small number of cases, the symptoms continue.
* This information is a composite list from the following sources: “Coming Out of Cults”, by Margaret Thaler Singer, Psychology Today, Jan. 1979, P. 75; “Destructive Cults, Mind Control and Psychological Coercion”, Positive Action Portland, Oregon, and “Fact Sheet”, Cult Hot-Line and Clinic, New York City.
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