Sounds Like A Cult - The Cult of Purity Rings
Episode Date: October 10, 2023Anyone who grew up evangelical Christian and/or plugged into teen celebrity news circa 2008 will be familiar with today's cult: Purity Rings. You know, the dainty piece of jewelry placed ritualistical...ly on a teen girl's wedding finger to signify her vow of chastity until marriage, or else?? Purity rings are not just an accessory—they're a bonafide industry, complete with rules, ceremonies, secrets, veiled threats, and religious trauma up the wazoo... but are they a cult? This week, a very special (ex-evangelical) guest, Normal Gossip's Kelsey McKinney, is joining host Amanda to unpack just that! Follow us on IG @soundslikeacultpod To check out Amanda's new book, The Age of Magical Overthinking, click here! The Magical Overthinkers newsletter can be found here. Thank you to our sponsors! Go to thefarmersdog.com/cult to get 50% off your first box. Go to Zocdoc.com/CULT and download the Zocdoc app for FREE. The Cotton collection and more are available now at SKIMS.com.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
ZockDock is a free app. You can find amazing doctors and book appointments online. Go to
zock.com slash cult and download the ZockDock app for free. Then find and book a top rated doctor
today that zoc.com slash cult. ZockDock.com slash cult. Thank you to our sponsor Schims. The cotton
collection and more are available now at Schims.com., get free shipping on orders over $75.
If you haven't yet, be sure to let them know we sent you.
After you place your order, select podcast in the survey
and select our show in the drop down menu that follows.
The views expressed on this episode,
as with all episodes of Sounds Like A Cult,
are solely host opinions and quoted allegations.
The content here should not be taken as indisputable facts.
This podcast is for entertainment purposes only.
Hey, culties, Amanda here.
It's just me hosting this week, so the opinions and work represented on this episode are
solely my own and that of my special guest.
In the purity culture world, it is always abstinence until marriage, which is extremely interesting
because the Bible is very clear that it is much better for your relationship with God and your relationship to the world for you to remain single forever in service of your faith than it is for you to marry and that you should only marry as a last resort. about here is like there's no money to be made off of an actually devout Christian life.
There's none. Because you should live in poverty, you should be abstinent, you should be constantly
in service of others. And guess what? You can't sell that. Yeah, you can't put a piece of jewelry on that.
This is Sounds Like a Cult.
A show about the modern day cults, we all follow.
I'm Amanda Montel, author of the book's Cultish, The Language of Fanaticism, and the forthcoming
the Age of Magical Overthinking.
Every week on this show, you'll hear about a different group or guru that puts the cult
in culture, from non-profits to theater kids, to try and answer the big question.
This group sounds like a cult, but isn't really.
And if so, which cult category does it fall into?
A live your life?
A watch your back?
Or a get the fuck out level cult.
After all, the word cult is up to interpretation.
We're all a member of something culty these days.
And today, I'm going to be talking with a very special guest about the cult of purity rings.
A subject defined by control and shame, but also sparkly solidarity, maybe question mark.
To try and unpack how dangerously culty this evangelical subculture really is.
Oh, buddy.
Purity rings.
What are these things?
And how are they culty?
So purity rings are a symbol of virginity and chastity, mostly used in contemporary evangelical
Christian communities.
A purity ring is effectively a sign that you've made a vow
that you will not have sex until marriage.
And this is mainly expected of teenage girls,
but also boys, but mostly girls.
And it's so much more than a piece of metal
that in case is your left ring finger,
your wedding finger, it's a culture, it's a business,
but is it a destructive cult? I have such a special
guest joining me today to help me figure that out. She grew up steeped in purity culture.
In the early 2000s in Texas, she had one of these rings. And hearing her talk about this phenomenon
from personal experience was utterly fascinating, not only because of the stories themselves,
but because the guest is so good at
telling stories, she does it for a living, Kelsey McKinney. Host of the delicious smash hit
podcast, Normal Gossip, will be coming on for a discussion a little later on, so stay tuned for
that. But first, for some context, I have personally been rubber-necking at evangelical purity culture.
Really, ever since I can remember,
I grew up Jewish and super reformed. So, purity rings were never a part of my coming of age experience,
but I was hyper aware of them, in part because in middle school, my best friend belonged to a
mega-church, and I became utterly enraptured with the seemingly conflicting rules and rituals there, especially when it came to sex.
So in my, like, cultural community, adults didn't really talk to their kids about sex, like hardly at all,
which wasn't good either. But you were allowed to have it without fearing the risk of ostracization
or damnation, but by contrast, in my friend's church, they were always talking about sex.
Even when we were like 12 and no one was having it.
But it was always in these extremely euphemistic, intimidating terms.
Metaphors of girls' sexualities being this perfect pie that you wouldn't want to slice
up into face or else no husband would want it.
I was 12 in 2004.
Right around the time that purity rings started to
explode not just in evangelical spaces, but in mainstream popular culture. And that was mostly
because of the then teen icons, the Jonas Brothers, Miley Cyrus, and Selena Gomez. Well, actually
not so much because of them, but because of the cult leaderish adults around them.
I'm the same age as Miley and Nick and Selena, so I remember clearly learning when
purity rings were in tabloid coverage of them. These good wholesome Christian teen stars who
took vows of chastity, and that was somehow news. It was weird that this was being talked about,
right? These like 1415 year old kids discussing their virginity in magazines? Weird. That this was being talked about, right? These like 14, 15-year-old kids discussing their virginity in magazines? Weird.
And over a decade later, the Jonas Brothers actually explicitly pointed out how inappropriate it was to have their sexuality scrutinized in public like that.
Nick Jonas said in a Harper's Bazaar interview in 2019.
It became a defining factor of who we were as a band, which was disappointing. I was just trying to navigate love and romance and what sex even meant to me at a sensitive age.
Yikes.
Interestingly, I also found that Joe Jonas reflected
in a 2019 interview that he and his brothers
were never going to talk about their rings.
They didn't plan on it, but apparently
they decided to come forward about them.
After a reporter allegedly threatened to say
that the rings symbolized that they were in a cult.
Fascinating.
So on one hand, you have the church demonizing sexuality.
That's what these purity rings are all about.
But then the media on the outside are demonizing the purity rings.
And so there's great shame on both ends and a teenager in the middle.
The power and us versus them dynamics alone are so so culty.
But let's back way, way, way up and discuss the history and roots of the culture of
purity rings.
It's basic tenets go way, way back.
All the way to the Roman Empire at least.
LOLQ, how often do you think about the Roman Empire meme?
Anyway, that's when, according to a book called Virgin, the Untouched History by Hannah Blank,
fathers could kill their daughters for having sex before marriage.
Hi, Sticks.
Ostensibly over the generations, purity standards and rituals became more of a unified culture
as religion itself became more uniformly monotheistic and Christian dominated,
but the foundation of the modern purity culture movement was really laid during the Reagan
years. The just say no era. According to a Guardian piece by Amy Denison, in 1981, the adolescent
Family Life Act, nicknamed the Chastity Act, was passed, and that empowered the government to fund abstinence only advocacy programs
for the first time in US history. In theory, they were aimed at stopping the spike in unintended
pregnancies and curb the spread of HIV AIDS, but this so-called Chastity Act only paved the way
for purity rings, and the religious dogma and Madonna Hore Dynamics, they symbolized and they became big business.
So they're emerged to main purity ring sex, if you will.
Sex as in S-E-C-T-S, not S-E-X.
That's a problem that comes up sometimes
on this podcast, sex versus sex, hominims,
those tricky devils.
And these two sex were true love weights and the silver ring thing.
So both of these were popular teen purity programs in the 90s and early 2000s. Both hold these
gigantic group events where they basically try to get as many kids as possible to take virginity
pledges to purchase rings. They would of course try to convert attendees and celebrate the glory
of abstinence. Sounds fun. So let's talk about the silver ring thing first. Kind of sounds
like the bling ring, but make it chest. A 2014 vice piece called I Went to a Promise Ring Show
and took an abstinence pledge, pulled back the veil on this program. It was an organization launched by Reverend Denny Patton in 1995.
And the author of this vice-piece, Harmon Leon,
described the program as the Cirque du Soleil
of Christian teen abstinence programs.
The company's official silver ring has this inscription inside of it,
a Bible reference from Thessalonians, and it says,
God wants you to be holy, so you should keep clear of all sexual sin.
Then each of you will control your body, and live in holiness, and honor.
Ho-ho-ho! It sends a shiver down my spine, let me tell you.
But no shade to the silver ring thing, it actually seems like the other program, True Love
Wates, which started in 1993, is the bigger of the two.
So I read this New York Times piece called, How an Absidence Pledge in the 90s shamed
a generation of evangelicals.
And it said that, at the True Love Wates, peak growth period in the 90s, an estimated
2.5 million teens worldwide had joined the program.
And one of the cultiest elements of this program, from my point of view, were the purity balls,
okay? Girls would dress in all white, and they would be escorted by their fathers.
Kind of like a debutante, but not so much a coming out as a not coming at all, if you know what I mean.
a coming out as a not coming at all if you know what I mean. And as sort of glamorous as a purity ball might look on the outside, the repercussions
of shame and confusion follow teenage attendees for the rest of their lives.
Purity ring culture suggests that women are their father's property, until they're
their husband's property, until they're their husband's property.
Peer-D-Rings have essentially served
as this very culty means of control,
disguised as a free piece of jewelry and a party.
Here's the other interesting thing.
Peer-D-Rings have definitely faded
from the mainstream zeitgeist.
I'm not re-ing about them,
and Tiger Beat anymore.
Pew research data reflects that Gen Z girls
are the demographic that's rejecting
traditional religion faster than any other. So as religion declines overall, certainly purity
rings due too. But in areas where it's faded since the early 2000s, millennial women are now
kind of left looking back at this religious trauma from their twin andin-teen years, like, what the hell was that?
Was I an occult?
And was it a live-your-life, a watcher-back, or a get the fuck out?
These are exactly the sorts of questions that today's special guest host Kelsey is here
to help me answer.
So without further ado, here is my conversation with Kelsey McKinney.
She is the author of the novel God Spare the Girls, and the host and writer of the podcast
Normal Gossip.
Oh my goodness, what a delish topic I've been looking forward to this for so very long.
Thank you so much for being here, Kelsey. Can you introduce yourself and your work to our listeners
if they dare not to know? Sure, I would love to. I'm so happy to be here, huge fan. You know, long time first time,
very exciting for me. My name is Kelsey McKenny. I'm the host of a podcast called Normal Gossip,
which is produced by a company called Defector, which I am a co-owner of, and I also wrote a book
called God's Bear The Girls. I primarily know you as a novelist. Really? They by dare say.
Oh, rare.
Thank you.
Well, because we're cold author, girly art.
And it's a small world.
We love cults.
We sure do.
We think our relationship to cults is complex,
but primarily categorized by love.
Yeah.
Can you talk a little bit about your book?
Like what moved you to write it?
What it was inspired by?
Sure.
I would love to. I never get to talk about your book? Like what moved you to write it? What it was inspired by? Sure.
I would love to.
I never get to talk about my book.
I wrote a novel.
It is about two daughters of an evangelical pastor in North Texas who is caught having an
affair and kind of the fallout from his choices and what those decisions and ramifications
have on both the church and his two daughters who are preparing for one of them to get married.
I wrote it because I think for me, you know,
I grew up evangelical and then I became not evangelical,
which was a very rough transition period
that I did not enjoy.
And so trying to like sort through having all of those feelings,
brought me to a place where I was like,
oh, I need to like think about this
a little less specific to my own life
and a little more broadly, which I think is other artists have done this too, right?
Like, I think Lucy Deikas' album is a great example of this. I think like,
similars work is really interesting and, you know, everybody who kind of grew up with this
level of religion is sorting through what it means to have believed something so much and then not
believe it anymore. Absolutely. Love Similar, huge fan. We had them on our show in season one for our episode on the
Cult of Celebrity Mega Churches, which was a topic that I had been itching to discuss because
it ended up on the cutting room floor of Cultish. My whole last part of Cultish was meant to be
about celebrity worship and celebrity mega churches, and then the January 6th insurrection happened and I was like
you know what I think I better put it to chew on and conspiracy
reality that's a shame for me because I would love to read you on that oh god
I mean everyone's always talking about Mormons Mormons Mormons
I'm just like why aren't we talking about the evangelicals?
Because they're in power.
Like that's why.
I mean, you know that, but that's why they're in charge.
That is why.
That is why.
I mean, they've been in the Oval Office.
Yeah.
And they are in our court rooms.
They are lobbyists.
They hold so much political power in this country and so much social and cultural power as well
And that's kind of the subject that we're covering today
So considering your evangelical upbringing do you remember when the concept of purity rings entered your worldview?
So I don't but the reason I don't remember it is like do I remember when the concept of the color green
reason I don't remember it is like, do I remember when the concept of the color green entered my worldview?
No.
Right?
Like, it was just something that always existed to me.
The church that I went to did one of the more popular purity ring programs, the True
Love Wades program.
And so I watched high schoolers go through it from the time that I was like a very, very
young child.
So it was very prominent in my understanding of not only like what sex was and what marriage
was, but also what it meant to be a teenager, which is kind of fascinating.
Oh my God.
What a forny not to attempt to untangle.
You seem to be doing well.
You have a septum piercing.
Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you.
Is that the signifier? Should I get another one?
Yeah, that's as we all know the universal symbol for I left
I'm doing fine. Yeah. Okay, so can you talk a little bit about what you witnessed though? So the true love weights program was something that felt really endemic to your child and your understanding of sex
What did you win?
Yeah, and I want to be clear that it wasn't just like my church that was doing this.
It was every church, right?
Like, do you know what James Avery is?
I know what it is because when you mentioned it while we were discussing this subject,
I went down a bit of a rabbit.
Okay, yes.
So for listeners who don't know James Avery is a Texas-based
company that started basically making just jewelry
in general, but kind of where they make most of their money
now is in purity rings and selling them
to young teens.
But it was very endemic in the culture that I grew up in.
It wasn't just my church.
It was everyone I knew, right?
People who didn't go through the Tree Love Wates program, like you were making a fucking statement, right? Like you
were saying, I reject to God essentially to not go through this program. So everyone I knew did it,
including me, I did it in high school, and the way that it worked was my memory of high school in
general is very vague for a lot of reasons we won't get into here, but I think that most of what it was was that there were like sessions similar to sermons where we would go through material and read about like what the Bible said sex should be.
And then there was kind of like a weird Freudian ring ceremony where like you would take a vow to God to say that you like would not
have sex before marriage and also your parent would take a vow to keep the lines of communications
open between you, which is kind of fascinating as an adult to think back on this kind of
culture where almost nobody talked about sex ever in any context.
And so then to go through this church program where you say, like, we promise
before God to keep the lines of communication open, it's like, well, they haven't been
opened. You have no experience doing this.
And and scarcely a vocabulary to discuss your reality, which you wind up gaslighting
yourself. Right.
When you don't have the linguistic framework, you have extreme difficulty, if not no
ability at all, to push back against a dogma.
And so you're set up to fail when they're saying the lines of communication have to be
open.
And on top of that, the vow that you're taking inherently implies that there would
be nothing to talk about.
Like, like you're saying, I promise not to do anything.
So then to open that line of communication
is to admit that you failed, which is,
mm, right, the vows are broken both ways.
You can't keep one without breaking the other.
So could you continue describing like what your personal
experience was with this program
and maybe some highlights and traumas?
Sure. I love to talk about my highlights and highlights in traumas. Sure.
I love to talk about my highlights and also my traumas.
So I think one interesting thing about the True Love
Wades program that I do think works, which is kind of funny,
is that it convinces evangelical teens
to talk to each other about sex, which no one does.
So you go through this program,
and then you talk to your friends about it in the car about like how their
conversation with their parents went, which is like not well, right? It's like I was so awkward I wanted to die, but then you have accidentally created a line of communication, at least for me that happened for me,
which everyone wanted to talk to me about it because I was not a blameless little flower. And so I think that is the one highlight.
I will give this thing is that it did open doors
for us to talk to each other,
even as it closed doors in front of us.
Okay, whisper network.
Okay, I mean, that is more than I can say
for some of the most destructive cults of all time,
which basically provided members is zero space to talk
and organize amongst themselves.
You know, in this case, it kind of sounds like there was at least a bit more wiggle room to kind of confer with aspiring
heathen such as yourself.
Yeah.
One really interesting kink in my understanding of the Tree Love Wates program when I was in it is that I am bisexual, identify as bisexual,
and I grew up playing softball,
which was like in many ways a very supportive environment
that I loved, right?
Like, girls were body positive,
we got to play games together and also everyone kissed.
And all of these, like, all of my very early sexual experiences
were with girls, other girls that I knew.
And always, the narrative was like,
well, we're just practicing, right?
We're just practicing for later.
And so it took a really lot,
like an abnormally long time for me to realize,
like, oh, wait a second, that wasn't practicing,
that's like an early sexual experience.
Because I just was so close-minded about the world.
And I had no frame of reference.
It wasn't until like high school that I met someone who had been on my team and she was like,
this is my girlfriend and I was like, what?
Yeah.
That I realized, oh, you know, this is something that also happened to me.
And so I was kind of coming into the Trilov Leeds program with this perception of myself
that I was already like damaged goods, having send already, which is not the status
of most young, beautiful heterosexual girls heading into a trailblaze program.
Understood. And how old were you when you entered the program?
Oh, I don't know. I was probably 16 or 17. I was in high school, like firmly in high school.
Okay. So by then, a fair number of softball smooches. Oh yeah.
Under your belt. Yes. Many. I would say prolific.
Understand.
I want to share with you my first exposure
to the concept of purity rings, because of course,
it was the Jonas Brothers.
I grew up ultra-reformed Jewish.
My parents are atheists, herbards,
some a certain amount of disdain for organized religion,
especially evangelicalism, which only really stoked my curiosity is.
My middle school best friend was the daughter
of an evangelical Christian,
but she was also sort of like the school tart.
That's a classic type.
Totally.
And I would skip Hebrew school to accompany her
to the mega church because anthropologically,
it was just like a delicious buffet to witness.
But when I was friends with her,
that's when the Joe Bros.
Purity Ring, Hlableu transpired.
And we definitely made fun of it.
It was just so novel to me.
But then earlier this year, the Joe Bros.
went on Andy Cohen's show,
Bravo's Watch What Happens Live.
And Andy Cohen got the Jonas Brothers to admit
that the purity ring thing was a bad idea.
And I thought it was curious that Nick said,
in theory, they're not a bad idea,
but you should know what you're signing up for
before you sign up for it.
I also never thought about how a purity ring
is a contract that you sign that has incredibly high stakes
before you have the capacity to understand that,
which is so disturbing to me.
Yes, I mean, I, as an adult now,
I think it is very important to talk to children
and teens about sex and sexual being in a like informative way,
right?
But what's interesting about the way that the church talks
about sex
and purity culture is that it is not informative and academic. It's like mostly about lust.
And so there's this kind of interesting period of time in which the Tree Love Waits program
takes people before they know what they're agreeing to not do. I mean, I'm trying to locate the
correct terminology for it because I guess I'm sick of the word creepy.
Like a spider is creepy.
Yeah.
The evangelical church is coercion of teenagers surrounding their sexuality is not creepy.
It's not creepy, but I think if you think about it in the context of salvation, which is the goal of the evangelical church, right, to convert people.
That's the number one goal of this faith, is to convert more people to believing what you believe.
It is exploitative, because what you are doing as church leadership is giving high schoolers, minors,
physical symbols that project to the world that they have made an abstinence pledge.
And then you are expecting them.
And I mean, I really feel for like the Jonas Brothers
and Miley Cyrus too, I think, had a purity ring.
I feel really badly for them
because I think to be asked questions about that
is bad enough at like a high school level
amongst your peers, to be asked it on a national scale
is traumatizing and embarrassed.
Absolutely.
And the people in leadership of churches would tell you, well, that's for the greater
good.
That them talking about it will convert people into what we believe and therefore it's worth
it.
And I just like, there are a lot of things I'm utilitarian about, but that's not one of
them, right?
I don't think it's a teen's job.
Absolutely.
So we're already discussing so many cultish red flags that point
to this pureedering phenomenon, not just being like, oh, you know, kind of nicky, but cult-like,
what you're describing as sort of an ends justify the means philosophy, but what I say the
cults of pureed earrings off the top, what does that mean to you? I mean, it is the physical symbol, right? Especially with James Avery, you have something to indicate to
others that are in the cult that you belong to the cult, but not necessarily indicating to people
who aren't in the know, which to me seems cultish. You have a rule that you have to follow that's really strict and that there are unclear consequences for unclear and yet dire.
And yet dire, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, because often we talk about cults on this show where the context is a fitness
studio or the context is a brand.
But the context here due to the fact that purity rings or connected to evangelicalism, is your life, your afterlife, all of eternity.
The stakes cannot be higher.
Yeah, so it's interesting because some of that depends on your theology, right?
Like some evangelical churches would say, having sex before marriage doesn't mean you're gonna go to hell, right?
Like you can still receive forgiveness for that.
You can still repent, right?
But there is like forgiveness in the church from those sins.
But what every evangelical church would say is
this is an indication to us that you are not currently
following Christ, right?
Which then gives leadership a reason to step in.
Which I also find very cultish in the sense that
if you had been found to have misbehaved, they
could put you in therapy for it.
And by therapy, I mean church counseling, right?
They could talk to your parents about it.
There could be roomifications on whether your parents could lead in the church based on
your behavior.
So it's not necessarily like, if you fuck, you're going to hell, although that is certainly
an underlying premise in some churches.
But I think it is a little more damning than that
in some ways because what they're threatening
isn't your eternal salvation, it's your reputation
and your reputation within the community.
And that is scarier in a lot of ways.
Yeah, yeah, because hell is so abstract.
Like your ability to relate to your community And that is scarier in a lot of ways. Yeah, yeah, because hell is so abstract.
Like, your ability to relate to your community
is right here right now.
You can see it in touch.
Yeah.
And I think this is not like an actual highlight
of the Tree of Wates program,
but like where I am from, abortion is not looked kindly upon.
And being a teen mom is very bad.
So in some ways, it is to your benefit
to not have penetrative sex until you are older
because no one is going to help you the way
that people outside of those communities might.
Right.
Although I can't help but notice a certain level of hypocrisy.
What?
Yeah.
Because at my middle school best friend's Evangelical Church, there were a number of hypocrisy. What? Yeah. Because at my middle school best friends,
Evangelical Church, there were a number of teen moms
who had been sort of like saved post in the same age.
Oh yeah, not a classic.
I mean, I can't help but think that there's a correlation
there because again, like considering
the distinct evangelical values of recruitment and profit, and also the emphasis
that they put on salvation, why would the evangelical church
as a business move turn down a new memory,
even if they are pregnant?
You can repent away from that.
Yeah, well, it's also some warning shot, right?
Like the evangelical church is very good at saying,
we have a lot of money, we have a lot of money
and we have a lot of resources and we will open those doors to you if you believe a bunch of things.
And so for a teen mom in a community with not a lot of resources in a country that is not helpful
to most young moms, having a church nearby that says, you know, you say you believe in this and
you can have childcare is monumental. Of course it's worth it. Lie about what you know, you say you believe in this and you can have childcare? Is monumental, of course, it's worth it.
Lie about what you believe.
Who cares?
But it has an added benefit of now all your team girls that are going through
the true of weights program can see a pregnant teenager.
And it's like, ooh, la, la, the consequences of your actions.
Oh my God.
What a great point.
It's like they almost want a certain number of teen moms
to lead by negative example.
Oh, absolutely.
And this brings us back to sort of these cult red flags
because the evangelical church in regard to purity culture
and so many other tenants is just so good
at reducing everything into a good evil binary down to sex.
It's like there is nothing in between sex being evil
and abstinence being good.
Right.
The most interesting thing to me about purity cult
is that let's say you do it, right?
Let's say you take a purity pledge at 16
and you make it through high school, you go to college,
you find someone you like enough to marry,
there are no resources
that are given to you at any point. Similarly, this also happens in the Mormon church, you have now
made it to the end of this road with no guidance. And because you are 22, 23, 24, your peers are
long past this. And so they're not in the same position as you. And that's kind of, to me, the saddest part
about it. You've set them up to fail. Because even if they exceed, they don't know what good sex is.
And then what happens if you get to your wedding night and it's bad. And you waited all this time.
So that's where I was thinking of this question earlier and I'm curious about your thoughts. Like, purity culture is a problem in the evangelical community
and far outside of it.
Like 100%.
We are fundamentally in a Protestant capitalist culture.
Yes, thank you to the pilgrims.
Things are going great.
Yeah.
For sure.
Like, that cannot be denied as much as this country
was ostensibly founded upon religious freedom and such.
Like, there is a hierarchy and the Protestants are at the top of it and their culture really
persists. And so despite growing up the way that I grew up, I don't feel like the culture was
very sex-positive in the early 2000s, you know, maybe compared to the 1950s, but I mean,
purity culture was alive and well. And so, you know, you were expressing earlier how like,
it's really important for young people to have a space to be able to talk about sex but I mean, purity culture was alive and well. And so, you know, you were expressing earlier how like,
it's really important for young people to have a space
to be able to talk about sex and safe, accurate terminology.
But I wonder like, and this is kind of getting slightly away
from the topic, but I'm interested to discuss it
with someone who grew up the way you did.
And neither of us have kids, but like,
how do we talk about pleasure to young people in this culture?
That is the thing that is is truly the most concerning to me
is that in retrospect, I look back on the way
that we were taught and not taught about sex
and enjoyment was not really part of the conversation
beyond like, oh, you know, a song of Solomon
says to delight in the wife of your youth, you know,
or whatever they would say.
Like, it exists and therefore God wants you to have sex,
but only in this very specific context
and there would be no other information.
And so I think like I knew girls
when I was in young adulthood getting married at 2223,
that would be turning to me,
saying like, what am I supposed to do?
I don't know anything.
And like, it's bone chilling to be like, okay, well,
there's a lot, you don't know.
There are a lot of things that like you probably should
have figured out developmentally,
but you didn't because the shame quotient was so high.
In a culture that is less shameful about your body
and your pleasure, you have people by the time they have sex with other people
knowing a lot more about themselves and what they want
and how they can like bring themselves to climax
and you don't have that in a community where like,
you not only should not be doing that,
you also should not be talking about it.
For sure. And those reverberations go so far,
like this is an extreme version,
but like I myself did
not know how to talk about or prioritize my enjoyment, you know, by the time I was having
sex and that's patriarchy, which, you know, is in bed with Protestantism and the rest.
I am hopeful that it's gotten better since we were in high school.
Like I do feel some amount of hope that like, Gen Z is better at talking
about this and that purity culture has waned at least as a like a list celebrity form
of communication. Like they seem to be more on it in a way that is encouraging to me.
What's interesting though is that I have spoken about language and sex and gender on a few college campuses over the past few
years. So much of our understanding of our bodies and our gender and our ability to have sex has to
do with the labels that we're given and that we can create. And so I've spoken about this now with,
you know, a bunch of college students, which is a very specific, not at all, representative community. But I found that certain college teachers and such
have remarked upon the sort of fear and trepidation that exists with
some Gen Z college students because they are so afraid of causing harm
that that actually can be silencing too.
The conversation around sex and safety and pleasure is still imperfect.
We haven't figured it out yet at all.
And I largely blame the effect that the Cult of Peerity culture has had on our entire society.
I think all the time about, well, I was recently having a conversation with one of my, like, sibling
and laws who is rather young about gaslighting as a concept and, like, the terminology of
it. And I was telling them, you know, like, I'm so glad that your generation has, like,
the words for these and that you have kind of, like, come into a knowledge of this and
also knowing that word will not save you from it. Being aware of the fact that having all of the knowledge
about consent in the world cannot save you
from having a mediocre sexual experience,
right, like that is still gonna happen.
Or even like a really bad one.
Yeah, sometimes you consent to something
and then you wish you hadn't, right?
And that is a hard thing about being alive in general
that like you cannot save yourself from hurt
and you can't save yourself from hurting others.
[♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
Have you ever been on the hunt for a new doctor?
And you ask literally everyone you know
for a recommendation, maybe you have a little bit
of anxiety about going to the doctor,
but you finally find the right fit for you.
You call it the receptionist, and it turns out they don't take your insurance.
Enter Zock-Dock to save the day.
Zock-Dock will help you find and book the doctor who's right for you and takes your insurance.
So this is how Zock-Dock works.
Zock-Dock is a free app where you can find amazing doctors and book appointments online.
We're talking about booking appointments with thousands of top-rated patient-reviewed doctors and specialists. You can filter specifically
for ones who take your insurance, are located near you, and treat almost any condition under the
sun. These docs all have verified reviews from actual real patients, not bots, not chat GPT,
don't you worry, I have personally used ZockDock, I used it long before they were sponsor of the pod,
which was I was so enthusiastic about endorsing them. I do have Doctor Anxiety.
I get stressed about the whole entire process, but booking using their app or their desktop version makes it so easy and effortless.
Like I'm basically online shopping. So go to Zockdcom slash cult and download the zock. app for free.
Then find and book a top rated doctor today that zoc doc.com slash cult. Zock.com slash cult.
So my lounge wear vibe in general is like the most giant t-shirt you've ever seen and the most
giant sweatpants you've ever seen. But then I tried the Skims
Cotton Collection and now I feel like I've been opened up to a whole new world of well-fitting
loungewear. Skims is creating the next generation of loungewear for everybody. This is Skims
Most Tagged Collection. It's made with a classic cotton fabric for comfortable everyday wear,
made from ultra soft and natural fibers, the cotton collection features elevated lounge pieces
designed for comfort indoors and outside.
Whoever said lounge wear was only for the house
hasn't tried scams available in sizes,
XXS24X, I have been wearing their cotton rib tank.
I've been joking in this episode about how I'm like,
low key, a modesty blogger with the way that I dress because I'm always like fully covered
But I tried something new with their tank top in the color bone and
I have received so many compliments. I think I look good in it. I don't know. I'm a fan
Believe the hype skims has over a hundred thousand five star reviews for a reason the cotton collection and more are available now at
Skims.com plus get free shipping on orders
over $75.
If you haven't yet, be sure to let them know we sent you.
After you place your order, select podcast in the survey and select our show in the drop-down
menu that follows.
I just want to talk about jewelry now.
Great.
I love talking about jewelry.
Perfect. I just want to talk about jewelry now. Great, I love talking about jewelry. Perfect, so, okay, cults often, though not always,
are structured as such.
There's a single charismatic leader,
and then an inner circle who does their bidding,
and then there are these sort of like
descending tiers of people with various degrees
of influence.
Who would you say are the major players
in the cult of purity rings?
Is James Avery one of them. Are there purity
ring influencers? Like how is the power being structured and wielded here? That's an interesting
question. There's a book I read several years ago called With God on their Side. It is the like
academic research book about how evangelical Christians took over the United States government.
And it's fascinating. And one of the things it argues
is that white men realized that they were losing power
and so they began to create a system
and inject it with power that would make sure they kept it.
And so I think like, on some level,
those men are at the top of this pyramid, right?
Like they aren't the charismatic leader you want.
That's actually the most insidious kind of cult leader.
It's one who does not have a face,
who does not have a persona, who even is it.
It's harder to imprison someone
who you can't even identify.
And I think at my most generous,
I do believe that people can believe things
and not be hateful, bad people.
There's not a lot in the Bible about sex.
So, I don't think that you can say it is the book's fault
or it is the fundamental idea of religion's fault.
The Bible is pretty quiet on sex in general.
And so, then why is import being placed here?
And who is deciding it's important?
And the answer to that is pastors, right?
Like, the people who are deciding,
this is an important piece,
even though it is half a verse in a book of 400 pages,
are the Southern Baptist Council,
and then the pastors underneath them.
And then I think beneath that,
there's a lot of people who make money off of this,
the churches themselves,
and also like in some cases private high schools, private Christian high schools will make a lot of money off of this, the churches themselves, and also like in some cases private high schools, private
Christian high schools will make a lot of money off of this, and then also companies like
James Avery, where your main source of money and income and induction into your business
is coming from 16-year-olds.
Can you talk more about James Avery?
What's the aesthetic?
Why is James Avery such a power player?
So I am like kind of obsessed with James Avery
and then it is a pretty new company.
Like it's not one of these like ancient American companies.
It's not giving Rockefeller.
No, no, no, no.
It's giving Joanna games.
Oh my God.
Like it's not tacky, tacky.
You're not like, oh, that's God-y, you're ugly, you're whatever.
But it is that kind of, like,
blessed in a script on a ship lap on the wall type.
Bridesmaid font.
Yeah, it's Bridesmaid font.
It's like, delicate crosses.
Like, the kind of, like, subtle silver.
Like, Pinterest Christianity.
Oh yeah.
And I think you asked about influencers in some ways,
James Avery is like very similar to what I would consider
like a Christian influencers aesthetic,
which is that there are not Bible verses everywhere.
There are not big signs that say like,
I'm a Christian, it maybe even doesn't say Christian
in their bio,
but if you can hear the dog whistle,
it's just straight dog whistles.
It reminds me of Disney Bounders, you know,
how like, here's Disney adult,
and you go to Disneyland,
you're not allowed to dress as Cinderella,
but you can sort of suggest Cinderella core.
Uh-huh, yes.
Let's say you were in a suburb of Dallas
and you went into a suburb of Dallas
and you went into a strip mall.
You might be like,
Oh, that looks like a cute jewelry store.
And I think immediately upon entering
your body would be like,
I cannot be here.
I'm like, you would know.
Right? Like, I think it is that kind of place
where you're like,
Oh, there's something amiss here slightly as someone who doesn't believe
in this. I could tell that something's off and I will be leaving.
Actually, speaking of evangelical influencers, and I haven't thought about these folks for a
very long time, but in 2017, like long before I started writing Coltish, long before it was my
job to comment on this stuff in public, I was completely riveted by evangelical YouTubers,
including, and especially, the channel Girl Defined.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, it's like Rachel Hollis' core, right?
Like, yes.
Oh, absolutely.
Oh, my God.
Those who are unfamiliar with Girl Defined,
it's essentially these two six-foot tall Texas Blonds
gorgeous, beautiful.
Yeah, absolutely.
No, lovely.
They're like modesty influencers.
There are those Pinterest Christians,
but they are much more forthright
than the sort of subtle James Avery vibe,
because the entire point of their channel,
and they have books, they have a bit of an empire now,
and they had a conference at least then
that I believe was called Radical radical purity, a swear to God.
They aim to instruct their viewers how to live
as a modern Christian girl in the eyes of God.
So the message is a little bit, I'm your bestie,
I'm your big sister, but I'm also your prophet.
So follow me.
Yeah, it's also don't look like a loser, right?
Which is interesting.
Very much so.
So it's like the Christianity of your mother's is lame.
Yes, yes, it's not your mother's Christianity.
And the cognitive dissonance is fascinating
because my understanding of evangelicalism
and Christianity in general is like,
you surrender your life to God.
Yes.
Similar spoke about this in our Evangelical Mega Church's
episode, but a lot of Christian music is very much like, I am
nothing. I am unworthy. You are everything. You saved me. There's this sort of
sense of like, my boyfriend, Jesus. Yeah, my boyfriend, Jesus. Like, I, I don't
matter. But to be an influencer requires a shameless amount of individualism
and personal branding. And so watching them reckon and try to negotiate those two
inherently conflicting attitudes was just a train wreck
from which I could not look away.
So this is also reminded me of something which I had forgotten,
but that I meant to speak about here,
which is that in the purity culture world,
it is always abstinence until marriage, which is extremely interesting,
because the Bible is very clear that it is much better for your relationship with God and
your relationship to the world for you to remain single forever in service of your faith
than it is for you to marry, and that you should only marry as a last resort.
Whoa, which is interesting, but it's like very non-nery vibe, right?
Of like, oh, never have sex
and simply go to the non-nery, ignoring the fact
that none's have been having sex with each other.
They're forever, just pretend that doesn't exist.
Bloop.
And I think that that's kind of an interesting problem
that you're also talking about here, right?
It's like, there's no money to be made off of like,
an actually devout Christian life.
There's none. Because you should live in poverty. You should be constantly in service of others.
You should be abstinent. You should be putting forth like goodwill over everything else in the
world. And guess what? You can't sell that. So true. I mean, there are so many cult comparisons to be made there.
Like, if there is no hierarchy, if there are no levels to ascend to,
then you can't sell the book or the tape or the course of the ring.
You know, like, you need to create stratification to have a successful cult.
And Girl Defined does that, right? Like, they will say the Bible is enough.
And like, Bible is enough and like Jesus is
enough. And then they will also say, but like, isn't it hard to focus? Like, shouldn't you take
these supplements that will help you focus on the Bible? The hypocrisy is riveting. I understand
why you became obsessed with it. It is. It's totally rig- I mean, I was paying their bills. I was
watching all the videos. I mean, this brings me to another thing that I want to discuss, which is like, what is
the allure?
Because this must be like a very alluring, fun thing, too, like, to be able to bond with
other people over your purity ring.
Like, that sounds kind of exciting.
And also, it provides an identity template.
So much of the allure of these modern day cold is that there are just simply too many
choices for what to wear and who to be and how to live your life.
And if there is a template, then that can feel comforting.
Well, the first benefit is like societal standing, right?
Doing the purity ring rigour roll gains you some kind of prestige within your social group.
But I think particularly for women, and we kind of already talked about like the lack
of reproductive health services that a lot of girls in places that are high purity, culture
face, it gives you an excuse to not have sex, right?
Like I think for a lot of girls who are maybe scared, be that of pregnancy or of the physical act of sex,
it gives you an excuse to not do it,
and it makes your expectations on the people
you date very clear up front, right?
Because a guy is going to ask, for sure,
why do you have a ring on your wedding finger
you're clearly 17 years old, really?
And then you're gonna say, like,
oh, I took an abstinence pledge,
and that is gonna weed out a lot of people
who wanted to talk to you.
And so if you're goal is to get married
and to get married young,
which is the goal of a lot of people,
they wanna get married young and have kids young,
the abstinence ring helps you,
because it leads out people who don't want that.
And it is a kind of signal
to people who might that you're there.
Yeah, wow. For better and for worse, it keeps you inside of this very tight-knit community
because those who can understand the symbol are more likely to, I guess, respect the symbol
according to the rules of this fiction. I want to talk about how purity rings and purity culture can set you up for failure
on your wedding night.
Just to put the stakes into perspective here to show how this cult can really follow you
in places where you wish it wouldn't.
I found this story on Reddit
where someone was talking about their personal experience
and said, purity culture is really traumatic.
Since we were kids, as young as 12,
we did these purity retreats
where we learned how physical intimacy
was a course to give.
It was your husband's to take.
Men simply couldn't control themselves.
And it was the female's responsibility
to dress better because it would be their fault
if something happened.
If you did make a mistake and had sex even once
before marriage, you were broken, you were damaged.
Goods for the rest of your life.
This person said, my wife and I waited until we were married.
We wish we did not in all caps very openly.
It affected our marriage so much and introduced
so much dysfunction that took us years to
get over. We didn't know who we were sexually. We hated our own bodies and felt immense shame even
after having married sex. It takes a ton of work to get past this. Yeah. I think some of that is
person to person obviously and some churches are worse at it. But I think that if you keep an
abstinence pledge until marriage, I think that that is extremely common
because you have the expectation that on a dime,
you could go from telling this person you love,
like, oh, we can't do that because it's an offense to God,
to saying, oh, this is something that glorifies God, right?
Like, it is a mind-fuck, I think, if you make it that long.
Like, yes.
Yeah, I mean, I really, really feel for people in this position because as someone
who didn't grow up like this at all, like, it's hard enough.
Like, it's fucking hard enough.
I did find that there is a trauma recovery counseling center in Ohio called C-glass that
specializes in offering help for women recovering from purity culture.
Oh, I'm thrilled to hear that.
That's great.
Yeah.
Their website says that research shows that women
steeped in purity culture often experience the same amount
of hatred and shame in adulthood that sexual abuse survivors do,
even if there's never been any instances
of sexual abuse or assault.
Yeah, that makes perfect sense to me.
I mean, I am like lucky in many ways,
in that like I was a huge failure of the program. And I think like it makes sense to me. I mean, I am like lucky in many ways in that like I was a huge failure of the program.
And I think like it makes sense to me. I've I knew girls who like when they got married knew nothing
on the eve of their weddings were like asking me questions that they should have known the answers to.
That's a very scary thing. And I think it puts you in a position where you can't advocate for yourself.
My DMs are open. If you need me, I'm here. That's generous.
You know, it reminds me so much of some of what I heard about. I spoke at a conference last year called the Rights and Religions Forum,
which was attended by people who had survived an extremely oppressive religion. There were ex-fundamentalist Mormons there,
but also ex-Aumish and Nananite
and so many other oppressive religious communities.
And it's the type of thing where on one level
in certain groups like the Amish,
there are a lot of people who don't learn to read
growing up or who don't learn to speak fluent English.
But in a way like growing up extremely evangelical
in purity culture, you're like illiterate
when it comes to sex, which is a major problem.
It is, yeah.
It's like handing an omnispercent,
James Joyce's Ulysses,
they'd be like, we didn't allow it.
It's like, you can't like,
it's not married, it's just like, oh my God,
someone helped them.
Exactly, exactly. Holy shit.
Okay, a couple more questions and then we're gonna play a game.
I love games.
I want to know your take on why purity ring culture was so massive and mainstream during the Y2K era
and how you think it's changed since then.
Thank you so much for asking. Britney Spears.
Is my answer to that? I think that the Disney Sony industrial complex, which created the Mickey
Mouse Club and then realized essentially overnight, oh, we could simply turn these people into pop stars.
It's a smart business decision, but if you are good executive, you also know that any adult
who saw this literal child on the Mickey Mouse Club four years ago is not going to want to think
about them having sex. So I think the purity loophole is helpful, right?
Because it's like, oh, she's sexy.
But like they were asking Britney Spears on the red carpet,
are you having sex with Justin Timber?
Like, explicit me.
And she was saying, oh no, we don't do that, right?
This kind of girlish response that I think is trained.
And I think to her credit, we are from the same culture, right?
She's from like Backwoods Louisiana, which is certainly
the same purity culture.
And so I think like, I think it's Brittany.
I think it's Brittany and then I think it was
the Disney group seeing that as a successful method
and being like, great, send Hannah Montana through it.
Send Hillary to us. Let's see what happens. Right. That is the fucking ding, ding, ding. method and being like great, send Hannah Montana through it, send Hillary
Duff, let's see what happens. That is the fucking ding, ding, ding. So then in
terms of purity culture now, I wonder like if you have thoughts on this, I've
been thinking about it how I'm sure that purity ring culture and the business of
it all is still alive and well in the Bible belt, but it's no longer
as mainstream as it once was. And I wonder if that has to do with just the broader decline of
American evangelicalism. I mean, that and like sort of just political spiritual divides in
the culture at large, like we are more divided as a culture than we were in the early 2000s.
Absolutely, but I do think that the decline in American evangelicalism is relevant here.
Like we statistically, it is dying.
And like they are in trouble.
And like they are losing young people at a rate
that is untenable.
Like purity culture absolutely still exists.
But I think teens have more access to the world.
And I think they are more willing to question
something that's put in front of them like that
than teens were in the past.
And I also think sex sells better than abstinence.
The fact that religion is declining so sharply among Gen Z
is endlessly fascinating to me
because historically Pew Research reported
that women were more religious overall than men.
And Gen Z has completely flipped that script.
Gen Z women have been quicker to reject religion
than any other demographic.
And yet, a ton of research by Pew
and other organizations
reflects that they are also the most mentally unwell.
So I kinda wanna unpack that correlation a bit.
Okay, I can speak to this from my personal experience
as someone who grew up very religious
and then rejected that religion,
is that every coping mechanism that you have created
for your entire childhood and teenage years gets ripped
away from you immediately. So like, yeah, that's why they're miserable. Is that like, it's not that the
lack of God makes you so miserable that you become mentally ill. It's that your community is gone
and your culture is gone. And all of the things that you knew how to do, like pray and go to Bible study and
read your Bible, the ways that you taught yourself to self-south are gone. Totally. I also think it can
be just really existentially painful to know things. Yeah, it's awful knowing things. I would love
to be have a flat smooth brain. I think I could be so happy. Well, and the sheer amount of information true in false and people, friends and strangers
that young girls are exposed to and assigned to contend with now is just so overwhelming.
So actually, speaking of today's mental overwhelm, before we get into our very, very juicy game
here, I actually wanted to take a second to share an exciting announcement with the listeners.
So for the past two years, I have been writing a new book called The Age of Magical Overthinking.
The subtitle is Notes on Modern Erasionality, and it is finally available for pre-order. The book comes out April 9, 2024,
and it's all about delusion in the information age. So a little bit about it, every chapter is
dedicated to a different cognitive bias, which is a sort of mental magic trick that the mind naturally
plays on itself. All of our minds do this. Confirmation bias and zero.
Some bias might be a couple that you've heard of before.
And I use each of these cognitive biases as a lens
to explore some mysterious irrationality
plaguing the zeitgeist at large and my own life.
So a lot of the subjects in this book
were really inspired by some of the research I did for Coltish.
The first chapter in the book is called,
Are You My Mother Taylor Swift? A note on the halo effect. And it's about the psychological
underpinnings that motivate modern celebrity worship and dethronement and how that psychology
is connected to our relationships to our own parents. There's also a chapter called, I swear,
I manifested this, notes on proportionality bias,
which is about how ideas of manifestation and conspiracy theories are actually motivated
by the same thing.
Anyone who was a fan of this podcast episodes on the cult of Instagram therapists or the
cult of self-help will be very interested in this chapter.
There is some juicy reporting and tea in this chapter.
And another example of a
chapter is one called a toxic relationship is just a cult of one, a note on the sunk cos fallacy,
which is a chapter that's very, very intimate and personal to me. So I am so proud of this book.
I really hope you love it. And even if you've never pre-ordered a book in your life, I invite you
to consider doing it for this one because it really does make all the difference for an author.
You can pre-order the Age of Magical Overthinking at any book retailer, Barnes & Noble, bookshop.org
as my favorite one, or even Amazon, if you must.
Pre-order links are also handily available in the show notes of this episode or at Amanda
Montel.substac.com.
So if you wanna check out more about this topic
of magical overthinking, I just launched this newsletter
called magical overthinkers,
where you can find everything from interesting interviews
to behind the scenes of the writing and publishing process
and fun culty things too, like a weekly list of books,
podcasts, and more that I'm quote
unquote, cult following, as well as audio commentary that I'm recording for my last book,
cultish. So that's the magical overthinkers newsletter. You can check it out again at
Amanda Montele.substac.com. Book pre-order information is there as well. Okay, thank you so much
for listening and back to the episode. I just have one more question for you Kelsey, and then we'll get to our naughty game.
The last question is just when did you finally take off your purity ring and what did that
experience feel like?
Ooh, interesting.
You know, I definitely wore it to church and around my house, and I drove a 1994 Honda Accord so it still had a
astray in it and I would just I would take it off and put it in there when I
went to school and then when I returned from school I would take it out and it
would be so hot because it's always 500 degrees in Texas and so then my little
finger would burn and you know that's how you know you're doing evil. That's a
vivid memory.
Okay, but when did you take it off
like forever and ever and ever?
Like not in front of my parents?
When did you throw it away?
Like when was it not a part of your life?
Oh, not until my 20s, for sure.
Like I was lying.
I was lying hard.
Yeah.
I was extremely good at masking.
Perfect. Well speaking of things that you can't tell your parents, we are going to play our game now. Okay. I love games. It's called pure or perverse. Oh, no. Okay. I'm gonna regret this decision. Yeah, this is definitely the grossest game that I've ever created for someone great. Okay. Perfect.
Okay, perfect. And I'm going to have hot flashes throughout it.
Okay, same.
This game Pure Proverse is very silly, it's rated R.
Okay.
I am going to read a list of sex asked you.
Okay.
Based on your experience, you're going to tell me
whether the act would allow you to, in good conscience,
on the books, stay in the cult of purity rings,
aka continue to wear yours and have it be valid.
Or is the act so perverse that you should really take it off?
Okay, got it.
I'm interested to see what I'm gonna say here.
So that's the rilling.
Oh, that's...
Number one, pure or perverse?
Dry-humping.
Pure. That's fine.
Definitely a lot of people would say no, but I think it's fine.
I think most of the girls I knew in high school were dry-humping.
Like, can't get pregnant.
You're not naked.
I mean, who's just say?
Dry-humping is fun.
It's underrated.
That's one of my favorite lines in Lady Bird is when somebody asks her how her first time having sex was and she said,
it's not as good as dry on pink.
Oh, completely.
It's like, is it purity culture, is it for a play?
I don't know.
OK, pure or perverse?
Masterbating side by side.
Ooh, perverse.
What about masturbating in different rooms, adjacent rooms,
thin walls?
Fine.
That's fine.
Yeah, I think that's fine.
This is not endorsed by the church.
The church certainly would not agree with anything
I'm saying, but that's fine.
Fine, totally fine.
I'm interviewing you.
Okay.
Oh, but what about masturbating at a bunk bed?
Up top, you can't see.
Oh, I'm trying to think about what the distinction is here
that is concerning to me.
Like that would have bumped it to perverted
in my understanding of purity culture at the time.
And I think it's visibility.
Like I think the reason the wall is okay
is that it's like, well, you can't see each other.
So what if you're visually extremely impaired?
Like what if you're blind?
What if you take off your glasses?
Yeah, like what if you're mutually masturbating
but you both have like a really,
really, really strong astigmatism. Oh, great question. I think it's fine. Pure. That's the
loophole. It's a blindfold yourself. Again, hot. Yeah. hey, hotter. Is it Puritanskulzer or is it kink? You know, where's the line? Yeah, honestly, honestly, because, like, deprivation is hot,
actually, when it's your idea.
Yeah, when you choose it.
That's also, that's the crux.
That's the difference.
It's only pure if you didn't choose it.
Yes, we're getting closer.
We're getting closer to figuring it out.
I like that distinction of what if you're blind?
Okay, next one.
Soaking?
Ooh, evangelicals are not soakers.
Like I know that Mormons are, even evangelicals do not do that.
Okay, in my understanding at least,
I don't know anyone who did it.
And someone's certainly what it told me.
Cool.
What about toys?
No, perverse, for sure.
Perverse.
I think a lot of even married,
come, perverse, for sure.
I think a lot of even married evangelicals
are like anti-toi, anti-anel, for sure.
Wow.
Yeah, because you can't get too creative.
Yeah, don't be too creative. And you know,
toys, that's science. It's not God. Right, that's electronics. Yeah. Yeah. That's the robot
taking over and replacing our jobs. Yeah. Wow. Now you're making it. Are you going to get
everyone using them? Which can't be good. No, okay, that was illuminating and deeply confusing at the same time.
Isn't that beautiful?
That is the experience of purity culture, though, actually.
It's like you are just confused most of the time.
Okay, well, those are all my questions.
That is our game.
So Kelsey, the big question.
Out of the three Colour categories.
Live your life. The big question. Out of the three cult categories. Live your life.
Watch your back.
And get the fuck out.
Which do you think the cult of purity rings falls into?
I think get the fuck out.
Yes.
I don't think there are many good and happy at things.
At the end of that cult.
Both metaphorically and literally. But oh.
So very true.
Yeah, this one is pretty cut and dry.
I mean, not even being able to soak alone, please.
I know.
What's the point?
I agree.
It's a get the fuck out.
It checks off every box, every red flag,
the power abuse, the exploitation of children,
nonetheless, yeah, summarism of it all.
It's the hypocrisy, I mean, dear God.
Well, thank you so much for being my very special guest
on this episode.
Oh my God, I had a blast.
If folks want to keep up with your cult,
where can they find you?
I am on every social media, unfortunately,
at McKinney-Kelsey. The podcast will be back at some point and it's
everywhere that podcasts are found and you can buy my book on bookshop.org.
Hell yeah, and please do that. I had a wonderful time. I'm so grateful to you for
doing this. I got to have a great time. Thank you for having me.
Well, that's our show. Thank you so much for listening.
Stick around for a new cult next week.
And in the meantime, stay culty.
But not too culty.
MUSIC
Sounds like a cult was created and hosted
by Amanda Montel and Eeson Medina. This episode was edited and mixed by Amanda Montel and Esa Medina.
This episode was edited and mixed by Jordan Moore of The Pod Cabin.
Our theme music is by Casey Cole.
To join the Sounds Like a Cult, Cult, follow the podcast on Instagram at Sounds Like a Cult Pod.
You can find me on the internet on Instagram at Amanda Under Spore Montel or on Substack at
Amanda Montel.substack.com and feel free to check out my books.
Cultivish the language of fanaticism, wordslet, a feminist guide to taking back the English
language, or the forthcoming the age of magical overthinking notes on modern irrationality.
And if you like this show, feel free to give us a rating or review on Apple podcasts. Stuggling with stubborn discoloration? Get the clinical solution! New Paulus choice 25% vitamin
C plus glutathione clinical serum. Advanced technology correct sun damage and discoloration with zero irritation.
Formulated with glutathione, a powerhouse antioxidant that amplifies vitamin C gently.
For all skin types and tones, the future of vitamin C is here.
Available at Paulus Choice and Sephora.
Paula's Choice and Sephora.