Hidden Brain - When You Need It To Be True
Episode Date: January 31, 2023When we want something very badly, it can be hard to see warning signs that might be obvious to other people. This week, we revisit a favorite episode from 2021, bringing you two stories about how eas...y it can be to believe in a false reality — even when the facts don’t back us up. If you missed it, make sure to listen to last week's episode on how to turn a "no" into a "yes." And if you enjoy the show and would like to help us make more episodes of Hidden Brain, please consider supporting our work. Thanks!Â
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This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantan.
It's December 1954, around dinner time in Oak Park, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago.
A group of Christmas carolers is performing before a huge crowd of about 200 people.
It all seems perfectly normal. Except when you get closer, you can see something about the scene is off.
Few people in the crowd appear to be in the Christmas spirit.
Instead of cheering, they are taunting the carolers.
Eventually, things reach such a frenzy that police are called in.
The carolers are unfazed.
They keep singing their eyes on the sky.
They're on the lookout for flying saucers, aliens who are going to transport them to
another planet.
One woman tells a newspaper reporter, we have been instructed to sing carols while we
wait to be lifted up. You might think the characters were stupid or hopelessly gullible.
Yet, the psychological phenomenon that had them in its grip turns out to be surprisingly
common.
You have certainly experienced it in your own life.
Today we're going to tell you about the events that led up to that December evening in 1954
when flying saucers failed to appear over Oak Park.
We're also going to tell you a second story, a modern story, about what happens in our minds
when our biggest dreams fail to materialize. Several times I said, you know, my friends think that you may not be real.
And his reaction was, why are people jealous of real love?
And why aren't people happy for us?
This week on Hidden Brain, the strange alchemy in our minds
that makes it possible for us to live happily in an upside down world,
and believe that everyone else is wrong.
A few months before the caroling incident, a psychologist at the University of Minnesota sat down to read the newspaper.
Most of the stories weren't notable until he got to the back pages where he saw an article
about a middle-aged suburbanite named Dorothy Martin. She claimed that extraterrestrials had chosen her as their messenger to planet Earth.
The aliens, known as the Guardians, had told her a flood would engulf the west coast of North and South America
from Seattle all the way to Chile in December 1954.
from Seattle all the way to Chile in December 1954.
The Guardian supposedly had the power to take control of Dorothy's hand and use it to write important teachings that she and all Earthlings needed to follow.
The only way to be saved from the flood the Guardian said was to become spiritually pure.
Most people probably laughed at the newspaper article and moved on, but Leon Festinger,
the psychologist, was intrigued.
He had been studying the idea that when something you believe is challenged, it creates a psychological
tension or dissonance.
In Dorothy Martin and her followers, Leon festering us a perfect real-life experiment to test
his theory of cognitive dissonance.
The flood would surely not occur.
How would believers respond when this happened?
The theory of cognitive dissonance predicted that faced with unwelcome facts, the believers
would come up with rationalizations that allowed them to believe that they were right and the
world was wrong. The psychologists and his colleagues had covert observers infiltrate the group.
Soon, they reported that Dorothy Martin's followers, who called themselves the Seekers, didn't
just believe in an impending cataclysm.
They were also convinced that they would be saved by aliens who would come and flying
saucers to pick them up the night
before the flood engulfed the world.
Your wives have been anything on earth.
Use that intelligence.
The seekers had plenty of company and they're fascination with aliens and UFOs.
The obsession with other worldly creatures had reached something of a frenzy in 1950s
America.
Yes, it came from outer space to fill the world with theory.
Imagine yourself as one of the crew of this faster than light spaceship of the world.
In Washington, ghost-like objects dart across the radar screen at the CAA traffic controls
and red light.
Unlike most people fascinated by the idea of flying saucers, the seekers were deeply invested
in their beliefs.
Many quit their jobs, actively distance themselves
from their loved ones, and drastically change
their lifestyles.
A man named Charles Lawhead was one of the most
devout members of the group.
He and Dorothy Martin did many interviews
about their beliefs.
We were unable to track down audio recordings
of those interviews.
But throughout the story, you will hear voice actors reading comments that Dorothy Martin and Charles Lawhead made to newspaper reporters
and to the researchers who infiltrated the group. They were certain that the end times were
coming. It is an actual fact that the world isn't a mess, but the supreme being is going
to clean house.
Charles Lawhead was a physician at Michigan State College.
His views eventually made him something of a pariah.
He was forced to resign from his job.
His church community scorned his new beliefs.
He and his wife spent so much time propagating the beliefs of the seekers
that their children were very nearly taken away from them.
that their children were very nearly taken away from them.
We'll circle back in a bit to what happened to the seekers. But as I said at the top,
we're going to tell you two stories in parallel today.
I told you the story of the seekers looking from the outside in.
From that perspective,
a group of people waiting for flying saucers look foolish.
But stories always look different when you truly understand people's dreams and motivations.
Our second story today tries to do that.
It looks at cognitive dissonance from the inside out. Hi, I am leaving a voice memo for Hidden Brain.
Some time ago we received a call from a listener in Arizona.
I hope you find it interesting.
Let me know what you think.
Thank you. She asked to be
identified as Liz. She told us that for a long time she had felt trapped in her marriage. I never
felt we were really a team. I felt I was kind of on my own. A lot of the time I felt he made decisions that didn't include me and I have a high need to feel seen and heard.
Liz felt her husband was a very smart man, but he didn't seem emotionally present.
Often, when he was off making plans for the future, she would feel exasperated.
I remember thinking, just be quiet and change the diaper. You know, like be here now, don't be somewhere else.
In 2018, after more than two decades of this chronic, low grade unhappiness, Liz felt she was ready for a change.
Her kids were grown and out of the house. She was in her late 50s and felt an excitement about life stirring inside her.
A youthful energy that felt increasingly out of step with her husband.
Where she valued spontaneity, he craved order.
I was unhappy enough to feel like I needed to do something about it.
She sought a divorce and got it.
It was her first time being single in a quarter century. She felt
disoriented and a little scared, but she was also consumed with a searing desire. She
wanted to be with someone who got her, really got her. So she sat down and wrote out the
quality she wanted in a romantic partner. I asked her if she would go find the list and
read it to me. Okay, I'm back.
The first thing I wrote was emotionally alive and available, evolved, attractive, open,
wanting to bond in Bia United Front.
And in some ways I'm hearing that these were also things that may have been lacking in your previous life.
And that's partly why you were reminding yourself that these were things that were important to you.
Yes. I think the most salient part was emotionally available and emotionally intelligent.
One morning, after a year of reflection
and gathering up the pieces of her life,
Liz felt she was ready to start
what she called her second job,
finding her soulmate.
She created a profile on online dating sites.
I took a photograph of me,
like a sailor looking, putting my hand over my brow, like looking
into the distance, looking for something.
Over the next month, she chatted with men on the apps, trying to sass out which ones
had the qualities on her list.
For the most part, no one stood out.
And then, one morning in July, she came across a new profile.
A European man named Sergio.
He was a very handsome man with little round glasses
that looked sophisticated, wore scarves in some of his pictures.
The photographs showed him with a bright smile.
He had a gap between his front teeth, which I found adorable.
Sergio was a few years older than her.
His profile said that he was an engineer who liked museums,
taking long walks, and going to the movies.
He looked perfect.
Even more perfect, when she messaged him, he messaged her right back.
It was like, you know, the equivalent of being at a bar and the guy saying, let's get out of here.
It was exactly the same feeling, like, ooo, okay, let's do it.
Liz knew there was little chance.
Sergio would be whisking her anywhere anytime soon.
He lived in Italy, but she was undeturbed.
She felt a spark.
The kind of spark she had not felt in a long, long time.
Liz and Sergio quickly moved to chatting on WhatsApp.
Liz remembers the afternoon. They had their first heart to heart.
I was about to start a hike near my house.
There's a nice uphill and then a beautiful long path among Pandoro Sapines.
And then you can walk for miles and miles.
As she started her hike, she typed a message on WhatsApp and hit send.
I just said, hi, it's me and he said, oh, wonderful.
I'm so happy to have the chance to talk with you and get to know you a little bit better
away from the dating site.
She typed as she walked up the hill, telling him where she was.
He asked for a picture.
I sent him the picture of me wearing my big straw hat and he said, oh you're so beautiful.
Liz had been waiting a long time for a conversation like this.
She told Sergio,
what my life was like, what I was looking for,
how lonely I felt, how I longed for our connection,
how I wanted to be seen by someone.
Sergio took in everything.
He was understanding, he was empathetic,
he was a fantastic listener.
He affirmed a lot of the things I spoke about
about my loneliness or sadness, he said,
wow, I'm really sorry to hear this has happened to you. I can't
imagine why someone would let you go. I almost wanted to stop and say, tell me more.
Tell me more about why you like me so much. And tell me what was going through
your heart at that point because you're going on this beautiful walk
You're talking to this person on WhatsApp
He's saying very nice things and very sweet things to you. What's going through your heart? What do you feel?
I'm feeling relief. I'm feeling
healing
I'm feeling good about myself
I'm feeling beautiful. I'm feeling sexy. I'm feeling good about myself. I'm feeling beautiful.
I'm feeling sexy.
I'm feeling seen, really.
I'm feeling heard.
Sergio wasn't just a good listener.
He was also open about himself.
He seemed to be in touch with his emotions.
He talked about his own divorce, his son, about growing up in Sweden and moving to Italy
as a young man.
Some of his writing was interesting.
It was definitely not perfect English.
His grammar and his sentence structure was sometimes endearingly foreign.
Liz liked that they were both bicultural. She had grown up in Mexico
and moved to the United States in her early 20s.
Liz and Sergio messaged back and forth for hours that day
until it was time for Liz to go to bed.
The moment she woke up the next morning,
she checked her phone.
There were no new notifications,
but then her phone pinged.
He sent me a message saying, good morning, beautiful.
And I felt, oh, this was not a dream, and he's still here.
He's still pursuing me.
Soon, their WhatsApp messages became a fixture of her daily life.
And then I start figuring out a rhythm of when he's available or when he's not at work,
and we start conversing more during those times.
Sergio explained his complex relationship with his ex,
and his sadness about not being allowed to see his teenage son,
as often as he would like.
He shared how he had distracted himself by helping underprivileged kids.
He had even taken in a young woman from Africa
who had fled to Italy as a refugee.
That was another tug to my heart.
His man had integrity, he was kind,
he shared what he had with other people
and really cared for, for someone enough to really help.
It was hard for me to believe that this person was as
interested in me as he was and as
consistent and as devoted to daily communication.
He made me feel good about myself.
He was complimentary.
He listened. He asked questions.
They hadn't spoken on the phone yet,
but after a week, they found a time to talk.
He had a low, very quiet voice,
with an accent that I didn't recognize as Italian per se, but it was
definitely European sounding, and I was a little nervous, a little excited. I was still
incredulous about why me, and I teased them about him, you know, you should check out other women before you settle on me.
And I remember him saying, no, I know what I want.
It felt so easy, so effortless.
This was how love was supposed to be, let's start.
He was the one that said the L word first.
And that just made my life full and my heart full.
And I reciprocated.
I fell in love with this man deeply.
You're listening to Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantam.
This is Hidden Brain, I'm Shankar Vedantam.
Before we continue our story of Liz and Sergio's romance, we're going to wind the clock back
again to 1954.
No flying saucers emerged from the sky over the Oak Park carolers that December.
It was disappointing, but the group knew they didn't always understand the ways of the
powerful spirits communicating with Dorothy Martin.
A few months earlier, in July 1954,
Dorothy Martin told the group that the guardians
had instructed them to drive to an army base
and park on the outskirts.
Charles Lawhead and a few other seekers joined her.
She later described the experience
to the researchers who had infiltrated the group.
We didn't know what we were looking for.
We were looking for saucers.
As we stood there eating our lunch
from the back of the car, just standing there in the fields
alongside the road and looking up at the sky,
we must have looked very silly.
On another location, the sea cars were instructed to wait
and door these back yard.
It was winter
time, so cold they had to stop their feet against the frozen ground to keep their toes
from going numb. Again, no extraterrestrials came to save them.
Each time the flying saucers failed to show up, Dorothy got a message from the guardians
explaining their absence.
It wasn't time. The journey had been delayed. They were putting the believers through training
to prepare for the real deal.
We don't have to understand everything. The plan has never gone astray.
We don't know what the plan is, but it has never gone astray.
plan is, but it has never gone astray. On the day before the predicted flood was to strike the earth, Charles Lawhead and the
rest of the believers, sat in Dorothy Martin's living room, eyes glued to the clock.
Tension filled the room.
Eventually, the clock struck midnight.
The day of cataclysm had come, but the guardians did not arrive.
The group turned manic.
They frantically began trying to reinterpret the guardians' messages, sure that they had
somehow misunderstood the warning.
The only possibility they didn't consider was that they had been wrong about the whole
thing.
Charles Lawhead explained why, and in so doing, offered the most succinct explanation of
how cognitive dissonance works.
I've had to go a long way.
I've given up just about everything.
I've cut every tie. I've burned every bridge.
I've turned my back on the world. I can't afford to doubt.
I have to believe.
More than 50 years later, Liz was feeling something similar. She was in the very earliest stages of what the seekers were going through.
But already, she was finding it easy to see only what she wanted to see, and here, only
what she wanted to hear.
Sergio and Liz had not yet talked face to face, only over text or on the phone.
So she suggested a video chat.
I remember him saying, let me see what I can do.
I'm having a lot of issues with the internet.
I live in an old neighborhood in Florence and we've been having a lot of problems. But let me get back to you on that, okay?
And I would be thinking, okay, it sounds like a fair reason not to look at each other.
Instead of thinking about why Sergio wasn't hopping on a video call with her,
Liz found it more pleasant to imagine him meandering
along the narrow streets of Florence.
At one point, she asked him for a picture
of the view from his apartment,
hoping it would match her fantasies.
But when she got the picture,
it was like a empty lot.
There were no cars.
It was just like concrete
and you could see in the distance trees and
and homes. It looked like it was taken from the second or third floor. Looking
down. I thought it was a very strange way of showcasing where he was. But I didn't say anything, I didn't pursue it.
About a month into their relationship, Sergio shared some news.
He was going to Turkey on a business trip.
He tells me, I'm really excited.
I am competing for a huge, huge contract with the government of Turkey.
If this goes through, I'll be able to land a multi-million dollar contract
for telecommunication to wire part of the country.
The trip sounded so important and meaningful.
Liz felt proud to be in love with such a motivated man.
And a couple days later, he says,
I got the contract. I received the contract.
I am so excited. It's going to be huge.
They're going to pay me all this money.
Here's a picture of a ship, like a cargo ship,
that's going to be transporting all the hardware from Italy to Turkey.
And I just wanted to show you what I started putting together.
Sergio sounded like a man who knew how to get things done.
Plus, he was deploying his talents not just to make money, but to do good in the world.
Liz was full of admiration.
And then?
Suddenly the conversation shifts.
He says, oh no.
Oh my gosh.
I just got a message that tells me that there's taxes
that I will not be able to cover.
What am I gonna do?
They're not going to let me not pay the taxes.
I am going to be really sad.
It looks like I'm going to lose the contract.
What a missed opportunity.
Liz's heart melted.
She couldn't bear the idea of this lovely man
losing out on his dream.
I say, please let me help you come up
with the money that you're short. And he said, oh no, I couldn't, I couldn't ask you to do that.
No, no.
And so I insist.
I say, I can help you and you can pay me back.
He gets quiet and eventually he says, okay.
Liz pulled the money out of her savings account and wired it to Sergio. She drained nearly two thirds of her savings, but that seemed like a small price to pay
for the joy
that Sergio had brought to her life.
A few weeks after she transferred the money, Liz went to Colorado to spend some time with
two of her closest friends, Sisters Diedra and Shelley. Liz couldn't wait to tell them
about her new romance. The sisters had known about her unhappiness throughout her marriage,
and supported her through
her divorce.
Shelly still remembers how happy Liz sounded.
She was feeling so much joy, so much love.
It was just bubbling out of her and filled the entire room.
And it's a big room with a high ceiling.
It felt like the entire room was buzzing with her excitement. But almost from the start, Dydro and Shelley saw something that Liz could not.
This was simply too good to be true.
How could this really be?
She had never met this man.
He lived in Italy.
She had barely even talked with him on the phone.
Shelley and Deidre shot uneasy glances at one another. By the end of the evening, they left Liz typing away at her phone, talking to Sergio.
Shelley vividly remembers what happened the next morning.
I remember Deidre coming down the stairs looking tired and a bit frazzled, she was absolutely certain that this was a scam
and that Liz did not realize it and was being completely taken.
Deidre had stayed up all night researching romance camps. She had come across an FBI page that
described the typical tactics con artist's use to hook
their victims.
Deidre said when Liz was describing her relationship with Sergio, all of that precisely fit the
FBI description of how these scammers work.
Down to the last details of his profession, his having a son and the way he was traveling.
And she said, I feel like this is a dangerous situation that is really going to hurt her.
Shelley and Diedra knew they had to nip things in the bud.
Liz was a very smart, thoughtful woman.
She had two masters degrees.
They would present the facts to her, and she
would realize she was making a mistake. Shelly took the lead.
I said, I know that it may be difficult for you to believe it, but I just want you to
be aware that what you've described to us fits the profile of a scammer. And I asked her if she would promise me that she would not send
any money to him unless she talked to one of us first and talked it through and that,
you know, we knew what she was doing.
I asked Shelley what Liz said in response. She said, I believe that Sergio is who he says he is.
I trust my own instincts and I am not interested in what someone else thinks.
When Shelley and Deidre questioned if Sergio was real, Liz did not feel gratitude.
She felt hurt.
Her friends knew how unhappy she had been. Why were they trying to rob her of happiness?
Rather than share further confidences about Sergio with her friends, Liz started to share
confidences about her friends with Sergio. Several times I said, you know, my friends
several times I said you know my friends think that you may not be real and my friends have told me to stop communicating with you.
Sergio did not respond with anger. He did not respond with defensiveness. He
responded with sadness.
His reaction was, why are people jealous of real love?
Why are people unwilling
to let people be and enjoy what they have?
Why aren't people happy for us?
It reinforced what Liz was feeling. I think at times I felt like they were raining on my parade.
Liz also told herself that Shelley and Diedra and her other friends did not know Sergio like she knew Sergio.
They had not heard the quiet conviction in his voice. They
hadn't felt his kindness.
They also didn't know something else. Sergio had told her he was coming to visit her for
her birthday. Would a fictitious boyfriend do that?
Liz could hardly wait.
After months of texting and phone calls, the day of Sergio's flight arrived.
He sent her a message, telling her he was on his way to the airport.
Like the star of a Hollywood romantic drama, Liz jumped in her car and buzzing with excitement
drove several hours to Phoenix International Airport.
I am bursting at the seams.
I am so excited.
I have plans, I have dreams.
I can't wait to see them in person.
I'm just high as a kite.
I am flying.
What did you imagine you would do when you first saw him?
Would you rush into his arms?
Would you hug him?
What was that moment like in your head?
Oh, yeah.
I was sure we were going to look into each other's eyes
and then kiss passionately.
Once in the terminal, she couldn't keep her eyes off the screen displaying flight arrivals.
I am pacing, I am excited.
I have that nervous energy.
Finally, Sergio's flight landed. People began to filter into baggage claim. Liz saw families reuniting.
She heard couples speaking in Italian.
And I wait and I wait and I wait and nobody shows up that looks like the person I'm waiting for.
Like Sergio.
Yeah.
She called Sergio over and over, but he didn't answer.
I remember thinking, this doesn't make any sense.
Like, what could have happened that he's not communicating with me?
He's not on the plane.
Liz was experiencing something that Leon Festinger called
Disconfirmation.
Disconfirmation is what happens when a belief is challenged
by powerful evidence.
In this case, Sergio not showing up at the airport
challenged Liz's belief that Sergio was telling the truth
about who he was.
Shelley clearly remembered Liz's reaction.
Liz called me from the airport, sobbing.
She wasn't so much pain because he didn't show up.
She said, I can't believe it.
I don't know what happened. I don't know what happened
to him. I'm worried about him. I think something happened to him. But at the same time, there
was an inkling within her that maybe this was a scam. I mean, I felt in her voice that
she was starting to through her pain, through her tears, starting
to see that it was possible that this was not real.
As Liz sat in her car at the airport, the wall of certainty she had built around herself
began to crack.
She thought of the unopened emails her friends had written her.
The links they had sent to FBI webpages and articles written by women cawned on dating
sites.
She thought about how Sergio always had an excuse for why they couldn't video chat.
She checked into a hotel and did something she never thought she would do.
She called the FBI.
And of course they tell you, don't call, you need to complete a form online.
And I completed a form online and nothing happened, right?
I mean, it's a form in somebody's desk and a stack of forms.
Eventually, she tried to get some sleep.
The next morning,
I decided to try and call him again.
And he picks up the phone.
And he says,
Hi, what are you doing?
And I said, what do you mean what am I doing?
What the f*** I was, sorry, I was using foul language.
I was at a control upset.
He says, if you only knew what happened to me,
you would not be talking to me this way.
And he proceeds to tell me,
I was on my way to the airport when my ex-wife called me.
And she told me that my son had been involved
in unmoved accident.
He died last night. They couldn't save his life.
And I just, I'm just in disbelief. And he starts crying.
I remember Liz calling me when she was at a hotel in Phoenix after Sergio had failed to show up at the airport.
And she told me, I spoke to him, it's a horrible situation, his son was just killed in a car accident,
and that's why he didn't come.
And I heard in her voice a transition from the sobbing earlier to being sucked back in to this idea of this man who she really wanted to be in a relationship with. In Leon's Festinger studies of cognitive dissonance, he found that challenging people's core
beliefs often produced a boomerang effect.
After wavering for a moment in the face of disconfirming evidence, people often returned
to their core beliefs with even greater ferocity.
The psychologist eventually came up with a list of conditions that typically produced cognitive dissonance. The first, of course, was that a person had to deeply believe something.
The second was that the person commit to their belief by taking some kind of irreversible action,
like sending someone a lot of money without the guarantee of reimbursement
or sharing something deeply personal that left them vulnerable.
The third condition was that the belief needed to be specific and grounded in a possible reality.
Liz's experience, meeting a soulmate on a dating site, is not an uncommon experience nowadays.
Since the scenario is plausible, it feels believable.
Watching from the outside,
Shelley, Diedra and Liz's other friends
could only look on helplessly.
From where they stood, Liz had to choose
between fiction and the facts.
But Shelley realized that for Liz,
the choice was much more painful.
She was choosing not between lies and the truth, but between happiness and despair.
I think she was so happy to be feeling these incredible feelings of love. I think she didn't want to let go of that. It was too good. It was simply too real to say
that it could be anything other than the truth. And then in a master's stroke, Sergio made it virtually
impossible for Liz to doubt him. He returned most of her money. I asked Liz what she felt like in that moment. I just felt exonerated. Why
was I doubting this man? He just sent me most of the money and more will come. And I just
felt everything's going to be okay. Did you feel at this point that some of the advice
that your friends were giving you that in some ways it was misguided advice because clearly looked they were wrong. Yes, I was right. Sergio was real. It's an unusual situation. Life can be unusual. It's
all for the best. It's okay.
Liz's boomerang back to faith, deepened her commitment to Sergio. She felt embarrassed that she had ever doubted this kind man.
She was upset with herself for being angry with him the day after his son was killed.
So when Sergio asked her for another favor, Liz jumped at the chance to redeem herself.
This time he requested she buy and send computers and cellphones to a relative of his in the
United States.
When I said I just mailed them computers, he said, good job, you thank you, well done.
He gave me a lot of positive feedback that way.
I did what he had asked me to do.
I spent evenings and weekends doing a lot of this. Having a sense that it was all gonna be okay,
that this was all in some way going to work out.
Liz began to help Sergio without reservation.
She offered both financial and emotional support.
They talked about how difficult it was
to be surrounded by memories of his son.
And then one day, Liz received a message
that told her that all her faith in this man
was going to be rewarded.
Sergio says, I cannot live in Italy anymore.
I need to come be with you.
I want to move to America and try it out.
Liz was ecstatic.
She immediately began searching for apartments
and found one in a neighborhood she really liked.
She sent him a picture and asked him
if she should sign a lease.
He said, well, let's wait until I get there.
Don't sign any leases now.
She held off, slightly disappointed,
but distracted herself by booking them a reservation
at a luxury resort.
Top of the line service in the most pristine and beautiful
canyon in Sedona,
dinner and champagne, chocolates.
You're listening to Hidden Brain.
I'm Shankar Vedanta.
For a second time, Liz was preparing to pick up Sergio at the airport, and he wasn't
just coming for a visit, he was looking into moving permanently to be with her.
To calm her nerves on the drive to the airport, list up by a car wash.
She wanted every last detail to be perfect for his arrival. She looked at her phone every
few minutes, willing time to move faster. At one point, she felt her phone buzz and looked
down to see a text from an unknown sender. It says, do you know Sergio Blabla, his last name?
And I don't answer and he says, you need to know Sergio is scamming you.
He's a scammer and he's out to destroy you.
Liz quickly texted back.
I said, who is this?
The person typed out that he was an admiral in the US Navy.
Liz asked to speak with him.
After a few minutes, her phone rang.
On the other end of the line was a gruff man
with a sudden accent.
He resided all the payments she had made to Sergio.
And then he dropped the bombshell.
He just starts telling me in very fast speech, I am finding that my retirement account has
been broken into and Sergio has sent you money from my account and I want that money back.
Liz felt her throat constrict.
The man told her he was going to hold her responsible for the payment Sergio had made to her.
But he also said he recognized that she was a fellow victim.
And he said he was part of an intelligence team that was about to cat Sergio.
He asked for her credit card number, so she could be reimbursed for the other payments she had made.
At this point, I am sitting in my car just hysterical, you know, trying to talk to this person
who is claiming to be someone who wants to help me.
Flustered and frightened, Liz complied with a request.
She read off her credit card number. Flustered and frightened, Liz complied with a request.
She read off her credit card number.
He asked her for the security code in the back of the credit card.
She paused.
She asked him if he had any ID.
He said he could not share that information because it was classified.
So I said, well, then I don't believe I'm talking to someone who's real.
She refused to give him the security code.
He threatened that he would press charges against her.
Again, she asked him for some ID.
He sent over a low quality photo of a military ID.
It looked fake.
Now I'm realizing this is not okay.
My life is falling apart right in front of my eyes.
Liz stared at the ID.
Her hands shook.
Just then, a notification popped up on her phone.
It was an email from Sergio.
We had a voice actor read part of the email.
Dear Lizzie, I am not real. I'm just a guy from Ghana. I'm really sorry that everything
has to end up this way. I never intended to hurt you or make you fall into debt.
At one point I wanted to confess to you and I wanted to ask you to not send any more money,
but I could not because...
I need to feed my family and take care of them. Please find a place in your heart to forgive me.
I wish I could find a woman that will love me
just like you.
The way you love Sergio.
And then he goes on and he explains to me in great detail
what is going to happen.
He said,
someone will contact you, telling you
that he knows everything about me.
They'll give you everything we've shared together
to prove
that they know me and they are trying to track me or help you recover your money back.
But truly what they are trying to do is destroy your credit and destroy you.
So please, for your own safety, don't have contact with them.
I mean, he's actually trying to help me, this man who stole from me is now trying to warn me that this is happening.
He could have just written nothing or he could have said, I'm a scammer, haha, bye. by, but instead he wrote these long letter that had the tones of a love letter to me and
the tones of someone who really cared about me.
It really is a very confusing email.
I mean, I read it and I did not know what to make of it and I can only imagine what it
must have felt like for you to read it.
What goes through your head at that point, Liz?
Well, I hate to say this, but it's really a confusing mixture
of connection and hatred and disbelief,
just a mix of what just happened,
what is happening, am I dreaming?
Liz sat in her car for a few hours.
She tried to collect herself.
Then, instead of heading to the romantic retreat in Sedona,
she drove home.
As the desert passed by, she slowly
let the truth about the last few months of her life sink in.
It was devastating.
I mean, I'm still at a loss as to what to say.
I actually didn't eat for five days.
I made myself drink water.
I could not stomach food.
I was just in shock.
I went to work, but I was useless.
I cried.
I called FBI again and I made a police report.
Nothing made a difference.
I didn't know who to talk to.
I didn't know what to do.
What was the next step?
How do I gain myself back?
She started by calling her friends
and confessing what had happened.
She was so distraught and just barely able to get
her words out, just sucking an air and hardly being able to get her words out.
Just sucking an air and hardly being able to breathe.
I was so worried about her.
I just felt like, okay, it's over.
She has realized what is happening to her.
I just remember feeling,
like all the air had just gone out of me
and I was just in an incredible state of relief
and a sense of, okay, now we can start working on her getting out of this and recovering
from it.
Liz knew she had to untangle why she had refused to listen to her friend's concerns.
She was filled with searing shame.
Part of why I wanted to tell my story is that I want to continue working on forgiving
myself because I'm not there yet. I have worse feelings towards myself than towards him. I feel I allowed someone who very
possibly did need money to be clever enough and insightful and evil to do what he did.
But I have more resentment towards myself because I allowed it to get out of hand.
The pain less experienced as she confronted the truth
helps explain why many people who believe deeply
in comforting fictions never find their way back to reality.
Dorothy Martin, Charles Lawhead and many of the other seekers never surrendered their belief
in the guardians.
Each time the flying saucers failed to show up, they quelled their dissonance by coming
up with new ways to defend their delusions.
Long after the chaotic Christmas caroling scene, Dorothy Martin continued to receive what
she said were messages from the guardians. She would send these messages to her followers
by mail.
Charles Lohead sold his home in Michigan and decided to travel the country, lecturing
about his beliefs. One of the researchers who had infiltrated the group reported that he seemed highly confident
that everything was still going according to plan.
In May 1955, Charles Lawhead returned to Michigan.
He had received word from a fellow believer that it was time.
At long last, all his sacrifices were going to be repaid.
He was going to be picked up by flying saucers.
He was instructed to wait on the garage ramp of the largest hotel in the town where he
had lived. All night long Charles Lawhead, his wife, his daughter, and another follower waited on the ramp, gazing up at the heavens.
As Leon festering her and his colleagues wrote in their book about the Seekers,
their faith was boundless, and their resistance to this confirmation sublime. Hidden Brain is produced by Hidden Brain Media. Our production team includes Bridget McCarthy,
Autumn Barnes, Laura Correll, Kristen Wong, Ryan Katz, and Andrew Chadwick. Tara Boyle
is our executive producer. I'm Hidden Brain's executive editor. Special thanks this week
to our voice actors, Thane Burton, Carol Schaffner, and Equate Thompson,
and our Carolers, the Auto Family.
Our Ronsang heroes this week are Elliot Aronson and Carol Tavris.
They are two researchers who worked with Leon Festinger.
We reached out to Elliot and Carol as we were researching this episode, and they offered
useful suggestions about university archives that might have information about Leon Festinger's work.
Elliott and Carol are also the authors of a very fine book that explores the science of
cognitive dissonance.
It's called Mistakes Were Made, but Not By Me.
Thank you, Elliott and Carol.
We're always on the lookout for great personal stories for future hidden brain episodes.
If you have a story about a powerful experience in your life, especially a story that has
left you with more questions than answers, please record a short voice memo on your phone.
Email it to us at ideas at hiddenbrain.org using the subject line, Personal Story.
If you enjoyed today's episode, please be sure to share it with
two or three friends. This is a great episode to listen to as a group, maybe on a long walk.
I'm Shankar Vedantam. See you soon. you