We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - CULTS Part 2: How Intuition Can Save Us with Sarah Edmondson
Episode Date: December 8, 2022Glennon, Abby, Amanda, and Sarah Edmondson continue their conversation: 1. “Love bombing” and other red flag strategies used by cults to reel people in. 2. The jarring similarities between c...ults and abusive relationships – and how in both your best qualities are used against you. 3. What to do if someone you love is pulled into QAnon, 4chan, or another conspiratorial culture. 4. The moment Sarah realized she had been initiated into a sex pyramid, and how she escaped. 5. The responsibility she felt – after having been such an avid recruiter – to expose the truth of NXIVM and help take down its leaders. CW: Discussion of cult culture and sexual coercion About Sarah: Sarah Edmondson is an actor, podcaster, author, and cult-recovery advocate. Sarah has starred in a number of TV series, yet she is most recently known for her real-life saga escaping the multi-level marketing company NXIVM – and DOS, a “secret sisterhood” within NXIVM – which can also be seen on HBO’s The Vow. Sarah’s memoir Scarred shares her true story from the moment she joined NXIVM, to her harrowing fight to get out and bring its founder to justice. Sarah co-hosts the podcast A Little Bit Culty with her husband Anthony ‘Nippy’ Ames, and lives in Atlanta with her husband and two sons. TW: @sarahjedmondson IG: @sarahedmondson Sarah’s resource page: https://www.sarahedmondson.com/resources Steven Hassan’s BITE model: https://freedomofmind.com/cult-mind-control/bite-model/ To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome back to We Can Do Hard Things. We are back with the really fascinating and amazing
and just lovable as her Sarah Edmonds.
Brave, brave, brave, brave. And Sarah is here to talk to us about her experience
with Nexium, please, please go back to the last episode
and listen to it.
And then we'll catch you back here.
Content warning that we will be discussing
cult culture and sexual coercion.
Sarah, we're going to start with,
what we ended with at the last episode
was the moments after
your initiation into nexium where you're starting to figure out that this is all nefarious,
but how the hell are you going to get yourself out? So start us there and tell us,
you had some friends who were starting to come to you and say, this isn't right,
You had some friends who were starting to come to you and say, this isn't right.
But you were trying to hold on to your beliefs, your community,
your collateral, your whole world.
That was like the whole world.
Right. Take us back to that time and let us know.
And I also want to know the moment when you figured out what that brand really was.
So those happened in two separate moments.
I believe the first moment where things fell into place is when Mark and I had that honest conversation under his NDA. And we actually had a
pretty clear picture of what we now know as DOS in terms of women being collateralized to stay loyal
and to subject themselves to be sexually intimate
with Keith.
And for him to procure as much sex as he wanted through this blackmail MLM scheme.
There was so much more that we didn't know that we found out later, but we had a pretty
clear picture then and we knew that we had to get out.
And my world crumbled so quickly in that one conversation because everything rested on a key
tenant, which I believe holds all of these groups in place.
And in my case, the Keith is good or in some groups it's like so and so is the prophet.
You know, this person is the voice of God or whatever.
As soon as you don't have that belief anymore, everything else crumbles.
And so many of the things that had made no sense to me over the years that I had to rationalize
and put on the proverbial shelf, which is a metaphor we use a lot and call it recovery.
It's like you see things, but you can't wrap your head around as you put it on the shelf.
And you put the other thing on the shelf. The same thing in an abusive relationship.
They use a tone or they're, you know, a bit aggressive and you're like, did he just do that?
No, he can't. And, you know, I'm going for this relationship and you put it on the shelf.
But one day the final straw happens
and the shelf crumbles.
When my shelf crumbled and I recognized,
and Mark really helped me see this,
that not only was Keith not who he said he was,
and it was all like a con,
but he was what he taught us as a full suppressive,
in other words, a psychopath or a sociopath.
I didn't have all the terms yet,
but I just knew that he was very bad.
I could see the whole thing for what it was in a moment.
And part of that was recognizing that the brand, as I said, the branding itself didn't wake
me up, but recognizing that the symbol was actually a cryptic monogram of his initials.
And it was on my, you know, under my bikini line
in my most intimate area.
And that sent me into quite a rage, quite a fury
and Mark and I very quickly recognized that we had to get out.
And then I actually had Mark tell Nippy
because I was still at this point too afraid
that if I broke my vow, somehow
I thought I was safe under Mark's NDA.
You didn't make any sense.
Oh, yeah, I was the people.
I lost the one saying it.
I'm not saying it.
Mark says it, then I won't, they won't release my collateral.
And Mark told Nippy, and luckily Nippy just got it, like immediately.
There was no humming and high.
Like both of us were equally as relieved to figure this out.
And to get out. And there was like, I don't even know, maybe 24 hours of us just figuring out
how to escape. We've seen what happened to people who'd left next year and how the
how the company had gone out. I say company, how the how the cult had gone after them. And we knew
that we didn't want to get sued and spend the next 10 years on litigation. So the first step was to
that we didn't want to get sued and spend the next 10 years in litigation. So the first step was to
extract ourselves without raising alarms. And we'd seen other people try to have conversations and to confront the leadership. We knew that didn't work. So I spent a couple of weeks basically
being a double agent. And that was a very difficult time because I had to lie to get out. I had to be like,
oh, yes, you all the coach retreat love you Lauren and keep doing my penances and my collaterals
and playing along. So they didn't suspect. Meanwhile, I was getting on the phone and telling
Paige, my best friend who I knew was going to Albany the next day for her initiation ceremony
and rest everything to show her my brand over FaceTime and say, look, I know you're going
for your ceremony.
I want to show you what you're going to get.
And this is what I believe it is.
And we like hatched a plan so that she'd be sick and not get on the plane.
Meanwhile, as I'm like packing up my home in Albany and pretending to go to Toronto to
see my healing
grandfather, which was true, actually, at the time he was sick, but I use that as an excuse
to not attend.
The coach training, it was probably the most stressful, crazy time of my whole life.
And I just was spent most of the time on the phone with people trying to tell them what had happened
without putting myself at risk. So I'd like I set up for somebody else to tell people the details of the branding and just did what I could to save as many of the slaves as I could before they
figured out that I was a defector, which they eventually did. And did a lot of the people that you told resist?
Or did they also have that reaction of Keith is good, Keith is good?
You know what?
Most of the people, like everyone in Vancouver, by the time we got back to Vancouver, like
10 days later, just the fact that we were resigning was enough for them.
They didn't, they're like, if Sarah and if you aren't involved, I'm not, because they hadn't even met
Keith and Nancy, most of them. The people that had moved to Albany and were in the inner circle,
they had already been indoctrinated and they moved quickly to do this whole thing. Like, it's just a
sorority and, you know, men brand each other all the time and that this is just about like,
them not understanding that why can't women do it too?
And this is nothing to do with Nexium,
they put out a statement that Keith had nothing to do with it.
I mean, lies, lies, lies, lies.
So the people that confronted me and tried to get me to stay,
I knew the people I could trust are not,
because they'd say things to me like,
but what specifically is bad about it, Sarah?
And like, if you don't know what's bad about branding,
and it's like, branding is you take a, like, it's what farmers do to cattle. And they'd say'm like, if you don't know what's bad about branding, and it's like branding is you
take a kit, like it's what farmers do to cattle.
And they'd say something like, what's only that if you make it mean that?
Because you make the meaning.
Yeah, so I make the meaning, right?
Right.
You're making the meaning.
So that's your fault.
Yeah, I make the meaning.
I'm like, no, that's what it means.
That's what branding means.
Yeah.
And then I'd be like, go fuck yourself.
Like, good luck.
You're on the wrong side of history. Yeah. And then I'd be like, go fuck yourself. Like, good luck. You're on the wrong side of history.
Right.
Mark and Nippy and I and Bonnie and Catherine,
we had a war room set up in our homes
for a good few months.
Try to get the word out.
And most people left.
Most people left immediately.
And then once the news with the branding,
that just like, when they feel like,
at what point is branding people
with your initials part of personal development?
Right.
Well, and Sarah, tell us about how you went public.
When did you decide to go public?
Because there's the war room and there's the reaching out to people individually.
But then when did we get this huge New York Times story that really broke open Nexium
to the entire world?
With you on the cover. Yes.
You were on the front page, yeah.
Yeah.
So that happened in stages as well in terms of like me knowing what I wanted to do.
As soon as I found out that I was a defector, which by the way happened with somebody calling
me being like, oh my God, it's supposed to be an Albany.
Like it's the branding true and all in distress.
And I just said, do you need to show you my fucking brand? Do not move to Albany, like, as the branding true and all in distress. And I was, I just said, do you need to show you my fucking brand?
Do not move to Albany.
And it turned out that that woman who had called me for help
was already in DOS and already branded.
And she was reporting me to show that I was breaking my vow
of secrecy and that made me a defector.
And then they were coming after me.
Then there was a legal case being made against me.
Claire Broughman came to Vancouver
and tried to talk to the Vancouver police to get me
arrested for fraud, mischief, and theft because I wouldn't return the student files, which
had all the credit card and address information and everyone's intake forms with worst moment,
worst decision, people's personal private secrets.
And like, you're not getting these.
And that was what she wanted.
Because when I said I was going to leave, I was like, I'm going to step back and focus
on my family when I was doing the double agent thing. They knew I was leaving, but they didn't I said I was gonna leave, I was like, I'm gonna step back and focus on my family
when I was doing the double agent thing.
They knew I was leaving, but they didn't know
that I was upset.
So I had this whole plan to leave in a way
that wouldn't raise flags for them.
But once they knew I was a defector
and they started coming after me,
and all these women in my center from Vancouver
who were sharing with me that they were already recruited
and doss and given close-up pictures of their, you know, of their vaginas, like sexy photos
and intimate secrets, the more, more women that I found out about this, the more enraged
I got. And so it changed in a very short period of time to be like, I just got to get my
family out, to be like, we got to take this fucking thing down. And I think you see that in the vow as I get more information.
But ultimately, Mark and Bonnie and Catherine and Nippie and I
had been talking to the New York Times that summer.
It was like a month after we got out,
but the story didn't air at the end of October.
And in those five months,
we were probably the scariest times of our lives
because we didn't know what was gonna happen.
Claire was trying to get me arrested.
We'd given them the story, Barry Meyer, who wrote the story for The New York Times, had spoken
to a number of Daw Slave's, not just me.
Some of them want to be anonymous, they keep changing their mind if they want to be in it
or not.
Like, we wanted more people on the record.
And unfortunately, I was the only one that was willing to be public.
And that felt very alone and very scary, but I felt like it's what I needed to do because I had been so loud for
so many years about Keith being, you know, the noble humanitarian.
And then to find out that he wasn't, I felt like I had to compensate on the other side
and be equally as loud as to what was really going on.
And that meant, you know, putting it all on the other side and be equally as loud as to what was really going on. And that meant
you know, putting it all on the line. And I didn't really think about the ramifications of that.
Or even just like how somebody might read that New York Times cover and never get beyond the sex cult headline. And that's how I'm known. It didn't matter to me. If this is the proof of the
It didn't matter to me. If this is the proof of the emotional abuse that's been going on for years now, there's physical
proof, then I have to do it.
I knew that there were women inside that had been slaves for even way longer than I ever
had been.
So I felt very driven to fix things. And they did.
We did.
Thank God that you did Sarah, because even though there had been outreach at points to
investigators, they had never followed up on that.
And the New York Times piece would not have been published if you did not go on the record.
And the New York Times piece is what the FBI looked at to decide to start the investigation
that led to Heath Ranieri's prosecution and is the reason he's behind bars.
And if you had not done that, none of that would have happened.
I can only imagine what it's been like for you
and I actually want to talk about that
in the aftermath of that New York Times article
with people just reading the surface of the story.
But I don't see you as a sex cult person at all.
Like I see you and have read you and have watched you
as a woman who is a seeker who got indoctrinated
and then got herself out and got other people out. And I see it as nuanced and complicated
and hard. And I know there's responsibility in it and also heroic.
Yeah.
Your career to me, what character is is when things go wrong, how do you respond? It might have been easier in an easier life,
easier path in some ways to just go away and say nothing,
but you not only stood up for yourself and your family,
but for all of the women that were still in,
whether it's your responsibility or not,
like your character to step up in such a public way.
To me, I just, I don't know if there is a higher caliber
of character, somebody when things go wrong to say,
this is wrong and I need to say why.
And by the way, you accept the responsibility
in your life for what you've contributed to.
That's what I just, I find so much love for you in my heart
around you coming forward.
It's really beautiful.
And it wasn't just women.
It was girls too.
I mean, there were teenagers.
Yeah.
In this as well.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I'm Jonathan M. Hevar.
I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things.
But I grew up working class.
My parents were immigrants with factory jobs.
And because of that, I think about class a lot.
And I want to talk about it.
That's what we're doing on my new podcast, Classy.
And what did you all eat?
You know, trailer food.
Shh.
Ha, ha, ha.
I was like, girl, why not doing that anymore?
Ha, ha.
You'll hear from people who told me awkward, embarrassing,
and strangely intimate things about what class means to them.
She said, you know, for the house cleaner, I hide the tag on the $6 bread.
And I just thought, don't you think she knows that you're wealthy?
You're hiding the tags from yourself.
Classy.
A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios.
Available now. Wherever you get your podcasts.
Sarah, was it, it was me too, right? Didn't, oh yeah, times like they weren't even putting the story out. They were like wasn't like vibing and up for them. It was crazy. I kept saying to
Barry like when is this coming out like when is this coming out?
When is this coming out?
Meanwhile, next seems having corporate retreats
they had a vanguard week with like very low attendance,
but people still went inside.
They're talking about how well Sarah and Dippy
are gonna get arrested because they're criminals.
And that was scary because I, you know,
Claire Rothman has terrorized people with a legal system
for years.
And how could you get that?
Yeah, Claire Rothuffman has terrorized people with illegal system for years. So I know I could do that. Yeah.
Claire Ruffman is the serious of the Seagram fortune. And her
role was funding the bank many things, but in part to fund
all of the litigation that was going after anyone who tried
to leave or anyone who tried to talk again. So she flew to Canada
to try to get you arrested for this. So me too comes out and this is so touching to me because
when all the women come together who aren't even together and so me too happened and then
New York Times decided that it was a good time. The wine scene story broke.
And I remember waking up and seeing this hashtag me too.
And sharing very cryptically, my me too, about what happened in Albany.
And then the New York Times story broke.
It was it was like the zeitgeist was ready for the story.
And truthfully, had the story come out two or three years prior, I don't even know if
it would have had the same results in terms of a woman like Mara Penza, my personal hero,
reading The New York Times and be like, what the fuck is this guy doing?
We have to investigate.
Because it had been investigated for years.
And we still don't know if the wheels were being greased
by Bronfin Money in the Northern District,
which is different than the District
where we're prosecuted, Keith,
or people were looking the other way,
we still don't know.
And then that, I think, will eventually come to light.
But to be on the tail of me too,
which ironically is what the current loyalists,
I don't want to give too much attention to them,
but they're saying that we use the me-to-thing to like play the victim.
But for us, it could not have been better timing.
And then, yeah, the story exploded.
We just lived in the aftermath of that chaos for a while, but then also felt like, okay,
that was the biggest punch we could throw, New York Times. And it did a lot of
damage, but it didn't destroy the company. And we found out later that what actually destroyed
the company was that we shut down people's credit cards. My admin person went into the system,
my assistant went in and shut down people's recurring payments and erased all their information,
so they couldn't even charge their credit cards.
We had all the students that we were in touch with, and we're talking about hundreds of
people, call Visa, call AMACs and say, I signed up for personal development, turned out
it's actually a sex cult and on the inside, women are being branded with leaders initials
and I want my money back.
When a company has enough chargebacks requests, then the companies will shut down their access to funds.
And that's actually what killed the company.
Not the courts, not the New York Times,
but the credit card charges then by an admin.
If we were going to change the world,
I feel like it would be Dina, right?
It would be our admin.
It's like the biggest badass on a...
Yes. So that happened. Can you tell us like, what was your life like after? It would be our admin. It's like she's the biggest badass on a, yes.
So that happened.
Can you tell us like what was your life like after
the New York Times story came out
and what was the world's reaction to you
and how did you deal with it as a precious soft human being?
It's a hard time to even remember
because it was so stressful.
I don't know how grounded or in my body in any way that I was, but what I do remember,
and keep in mind that we'd been filming at this point because we didn't know we were
making the vow.
We just knew we had to document things.
So there was always a camera around, which I got very used to and often forgot about,
but we felt like this
had this had we had to make sure that this was on camera so we could and anything defend ourselves
because we still thought that Claire was coming after us. Yeah, and you're recording like all
of your conversations. Yes, everything was recorded. So like that's one thing that I
think is love watching the about because it's like real your actual voices. Yes, it is very
real. There's not it's not reenactment.
Oh, there's some parts that are reenactment
that you know that is, that's obvious.
But yeah, there was, from that point,
it was a lot of media requests.
I went on 2020, which was another big punch,
was not the best interview.
It's 2020, it's like little sound bites.
It's not like this where you get into the nuance
and the gritty and the feeling, it's like little sound bites. It's not like this where you get into the nuance and the gritty and the feeling, it's just clips.
And that was really difficult because between that
and the New York Times, people didn't know what they're looking at.
And even differently than now.
Now we have so many documentaries about cults
and I feel like people are so much more aware.
Yes.
Even five years ago, people were, I just,
I know not to do it now, but I couldn't
help myself to look at the comments. And it was horrible. It was, it was very dehumanizing.
And, you know, what the fuck, why would she, like, why would she even say yes to that?
Like, of course, that was the way I thought you should know in the, in the, Val. We got
moved made it through the whole thing. We weren't talking back to you at all. Like a second, you started looking at the comments.
I mean, I was like, no.
She's lost her mind finally.
Yes!
Yes!
Yeah, ironically, when the vowel came out,
that's when the slew of comments and the other way came to me,
like, no, we believe you.
Like, we got your back and your brave,
but it's been so positive. I can't even tell you, like, no, we believe you. Like we got your back and your brave, but it's been so positive.
I can't even tell you, like my life now is so not that.
Like I feel very understood,
and I really attribute that to the vow.
Like I feel the vow really did us a solid and terms of
showing the world what it looks like
and what we thought we were building.
And, you know, I've had friends over the years
that have supported me and, you know, Sarah's just doing
her thing and certainly think it was a cult,
but like it was weird, you know?
And now they'd be like, if I had known it was that,
I totally would have joined.
Like, to have people say, I would have joined that.
That's very vindicating to me because when you otherwise
groups like this and like, that's so weird
and I would never be a part of that.
It doesn't give people any knowledge
or any education or any nuggets of wisdom.
And I think that the vow does that
and why I continue to speak about it
in our podcast as well as that I wanna give people
the nuggets of what those good things look like
when you join these groups.
Let's talk about that.
Let's talk about high control groups
because that's something that's one term that we use,
to describe
this kind of situation. And I'd love to talk about it in a wide way because, you know, we,
a lot of us have experience with abusive relationships, a high control group can be two people,
a high control group could be a family. I feel surprised when people say that this is so stunning
and I could never be involved in this. I mean, I were talking about we both come from Catholic backgrounds
and Catholicism. Again, there's a lot of beautiful things in the world. And also is a group
with a shared dogma that has a belief system that often encourages its followers to rise
above their intuition and not listen to themselves. I mean, the Pope has lots of robes, has a sex
scandal, right? Yeah. At the tippity top of it and people stay. Yeah. So I just, yeah, I
feel like we need to be humble in this conversation. And let's talk about, you knowing what you
know now, talk to us about what a high control group is and what we should be looking for.
Absolutely.
And I appreciate that because the word cult in and of itself actually isn't great because
it has a perception, like I said from the beginning, that is very sensationalized and
is very 1970s, 1980s, Jim Jones, Kool-Aid robes, all those things.
And othering allows us to go over there.
And othering. And othering. So over there.
That's not nice.
Yes.
And I will say just a little tangent about that,
that every single person who's ever said to me that, yeah,
I could really appreciate your story,
but I would never happen to me because I'm so much more skeptical
or I'm more discerning or whatever.
And then later in the conversation,
they're telling me about something that they do.
Like, oh, yeah, I just do meditation.
I'm part of transcendental meditation.
It's like, you're helpful.
I'm like, well, that's also a fucking cult.
Like your mantra is not a problem for you.
Like, I meditate as well.
I don't have a mantra, but like, that organization has so much scandal behind it, but you haven't
researched.
That's the thing.
Is that many people dabble?
I did Bikram's yoga for you.
I'm not going to fill you ailly a call like that guy, right?
I love yoga, but it has to be non-dogmatic, like not totally, you too.
Mm-hmm.
Thing, non-denominational yoga.
Because here's what I think.
This is my commitment to, because I know I'm a seeker.
I'm obsessed with purpose, community, although I'd rather not actually be in person, but community,
purpose, feeling, seeking, all the things.
My theory is everything a little bit, but nothing all the way.
Nothing all the way.
Because what I think is that when I look at my people, the seekers, the ones who get in
trouble are the ones who think they found.
Seekers cannot find. If you are a seeker who thinks you have found, you are likely in a cult.
The job of the seeker is to seek until we die. There's nowhere to land, there's no solid ground,
there's nobody who has solved humanity or life, there's no science of emotion, there's nowhere to land. There's no solid ground. There's nobody who has solved humanity or life.
There's no science of emotion.
There is no sense to be made of it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So the purpose of the secret is to keep seeking.
You're like a seagull who never gets to land.
You just absolutely.
And it's something that we recently had,
probably our biggest guest of all time,
we'd had Kurt Toley on our podcast.
And we got some shit from our audience,
but they were like, I thought this was a safe space.
People often equate spirituality with Coltie.
Right, especially if they've been in a spiritual group,
there's lots of overlap in the words sound the same,
they call it word salad, where things don't make sense,
and you're like trying to make it make sense.
Other people found it very helpful,
but it was been our most controversial episode.
And I said to our audience, I'm really sorry, people were upset and it brought up stuff.
Apologies, like I gave a trigger warning, but obviously it wasn't enough.
But I also said, I never said that he's the way, or like this is the only way.
Like this is a book that was helpful for me in my healing at the time.
And we were having a conversation with an expert, which is what we say we do.
Experts whistleblowers and survivors. He's an expert in the field of spirituality with billions of
books sold. Hey, we get to talk to him. Let's find out what he has to say. If you don't like it, skip it.
So what's the difference? We're in an expert and a cult leader.
This is what I said to my team because some people like, I'm worried about you Sarah that you found
a new guru. I'm like, I never said he was my guru,
but you can take the tools and put them in your life.
And that's gonna be fine.
Put them in your toolbox.
But when you make the tools your life,
that's when it's a problem.
And I said, if I start like working with Eckhart Toley
and joining his inner circle
and following him around the world,
and then you can be concerned
and call an interventionist.
But I'm not saying that.
I'm not doing that.
So I'm self-aware about my journey now.
I'm very skeptical.
It's taken me a long time.
So I think the thing that I look for,
and I have to go back to my own experience,
are the things that make you right for abuse.
And it's a little bit different in each group.
But the same template, like when we have people on, like XOvo's witness and XFLDS and X-Scientologists, the things that happen in them
are the exact same thing every time and it almost always starts with an invitation to something
like a potluck or a party or a personality quiz or a yoga class and there's in that invitation the
person is feels really good about where
they are and they call it love bombing and I'm just a preface to say like not everyone who's
nice to you is trying to love bomb you. But you are saying we should not go to parties. Definitely
not go to parties or potlucks or damn parties or personnel. But it's good thing to be skeptical
skeptical of and I am certainly very nervous about any invitation and I always do my research.
But usually it's like that bait and switch.
Come check out this.
We're having a book club or a lot of political cults.
You know, we're raising money for this or that.
And people get involved and then they find this camaraderie.
They find this and for me hugely belonging.
Such a drive for me my whole life.
What does love bombing look like?
Love bombing is, and we were taught to do this,
and I thought it was a good thing,
but like when people came to our intro nights,
we'd welcome them and be like,
and be interested in them,
and I genuinely was interested in them.
So I'd be like, my God, Glenn,
and I heard so much about you.
Abby said that you're like really a seeker,
and I'm a seeker too,
and can I get you glass of water here,
and like, let's talk to me about your life, and I heard you're like really a seeker and I'm a seeker too. And can I get you glass of water here and like let's and talk to me about your life.
And I heard you're a writer and like what's you really want it?
Like I want to know about you and connect with you.
And for me, that was really authentic.
But I also knew that I was creating an atmosphere in the center for people and people would say
this after my info nights.
I don't know what this is, but I want to be a part of it because it feels good.
Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. what we're calling cultish, which is the idea that like the brand new people are immediately
showered with praise and love and to make them feel a sincere sense of belonging. And like,
I want more of that. Yes. And connection. And it's across the board.
I probably are one of the most meaningful interviews that we've all had recently was with Evan
Rachel Wood
about her experience with Marilyn Manson. She talks about that a lot as well. When he met her,
he picked her out of her crowd and very much groomed her. It wasn't like, hey, you're going to be
in a relationship with me and I'm going to exploit you. He made her feel special and she thought
she was having this relationship with a cool older artsy alternative guy.
And there was love bombing in that grooming process.
And this happens in relationships all the time.
It's like the one of the number one things
that a narcissist will do is bomb you with love
so that when you deliver the first zinger of
like in the game they call it nagging
when there's somebody,
you're bringing somebody down,
then the person who's been love bomb thinks
that they can only get that love again from that person.
Okay, so the difference between kindness and love bombing
is love bombing is just too much.
It's right away, it's a showering,
there's no build, there's no like actual connection.
It's just immediate shower of adventure.
There's a motivation.
So the motivation.
Yeah, the intent.
The intent is for that.
It's a combat.
It's a combat.
It's a tricky thing because if you're not aware of it,
you might not be able to tell the difference.
Right.
Which is why all of these things together,
they have to be viewed together.
I mean, this is why it's so sneaky.
If you have that experience of love bombing,
it might just be a person who's genuinely excited to see you. It's only when it's, it's also connected
to isolation and let's go through it. Have you really? Yes. Okay. Okay. So that was the next
on my list was, was isolation and an all group seek to isolate their followers from the outside
world, either physically in a compound or emotionally
in a way that's, you know, like,
if I had a problem with anything in next year,
I could never tell anyone outside.
If I could tell my mom, like, I don't like it actually,
that, you know, Keith is blah, blah, blah, blah.
Then my mom would, because she knew the whole time,
and she was keeping the doors open for me to come back to her.
And I knew she disapproved of him.
I knew she thought that she was a megalomaniac, but I was like, oh, she just doesn't understand.
So I couldn't give her anything, right?
So any concern you had to go inside the group.
And that's key.
And then Dr. Stephen Hassan has this thing called the bite model where he breaks down the different
things that a that a cult will do to control in a bite being controlling behavior,
controlling information, thoughts, and emotions. So all the red flags to look out
for are the leadership controlling the how the cult member behaves. So that would
be things like restricting calories or sleep deprivation. I mean my first five
day I slept very very little because the days were so long.
And the response to that would be like,
well, we're just trying to get you your money's worth.
There's always a response to how this thing is not that,
or like with the calories,
but like if people are choosing,
like who are you to say how they diet or don't diet?
Right.
Right?
And that's how physiological, right?
Like when you don't have the sleep,
your prefrontal cortex is exactly primed to be in the most
vulnerable place to be receiving those messages.
I mean, it's like the idea of time and food deprivation being this magic space.
Okay.
So it wasn't just that Reneerie-like skinny women.
Or walking in the middle of the night. It was like, right. It was that, liked skinny women or walking in the middle of the night. It was like right
It was that oh he always walk in the middle of the night. Yeah, he always walking and it wasn't he always like
The one person well all of all of the leadership saying like well if somebody doesn't want to be here
then
Then that's great right because like they're their intuition is like something's going on here.
They're like, let's just go.
We don't want you here.
And so you keep like the core people who are there
are the ones that will buy into all of the dogma
and all of the rules that require somebody to stay
in the actual cult itself.
Yes, I was a good sheep.
I always have been a good girl,
but I'm also internally a bad girl.
Like Nippy, for example, they wouldn't promote him because they called him defiant, because
you wouldn't do the things that we had to do.
But I would do them because I wanted the rewards, I wanted the promotions, I wanted to
keep getting rewarded, but then I started to realize, like, nobody was checking, so I said
that I was doing the things.
Do you know what I mean?
Like, I would be like, yeah, I entered doing the things. Do you know what I mean?
Like, I would be like, yeah, I entered my coach points.
No, I didn't, because it's so tedious.
There was the cult identity and there's the pre-cult identity.
And I learned that when I got out,
because I was like, I went right back to my pre-cult identity
very, very quickly.
And I realized that I was doing the things
that I needed to do to like survive in the group,
but I didn't really believe in all of them.
So I was able to snap out of it very quickly.
Okay, so I see a back to red flags.
Isolation, I mean, one of the huge red flags that I see all the time is when there's a leader
who's accountable to nobody.
There's no checks and balances around them.
This is the person that can get away with anything and no one's going to tell them no.
And often they're narcissistic, they're charming.
They have this following that people just will do whatever.
Like no one's giving them a reality check
because it's like, you see this a lot with movie stars as well.
They just have an entourage around them
that are just bunch of yes people.
So it's the same thing with a cult.
And you can't, a huge red flag is you can't question any any criticism is met with gaslighting and
we I called it in my book the the next year in flip. Right. If I if I were to say,
you know, I don't I don't know how I feel about X Y and Z. Well, you you seem
that reactive. You should get Neam on that and you know, or sit with that or
journal on it. You
see them invested and work on that before we talk about it. So because I was reactive
about it, it meant that my issue had no merit. That's why we presume Nancy didn't call
me back. When I left her the voicemail, when I left, because I was too angry.
Well, if you teach people that being reactive is wrong,
then that's a really good way to make sure no one ever reacts.
Yes, to what you're doing.
Exactly.
And another thing they taught us was speaking dishonorably
is wrong, which is true.
Like if we have a mutual friend who is, you know,
I'm trying to share information, I could say to you,
like, oh, that person's a real dick.
You know, that's dishonorable. Or I could be like, oh, that person's a real dick. That's dishonorable.
Or I could be like, oh, this person's working through some of their anger stuff right now.
That would be more honorable.
So Keith was protected anytime anyone said anything negative.
Even if somebody said, oh, I just met Keith.
He seems like kind of like just a normal, like just kind of a slub or so whatever.
Yeah, actually, he even heard Nancy say multiple, because she would always ask people after forums,
who's here seeing Vanguard for the first time?
And people would put up their hand and she'd say,
what do you think?
Isn't it amazing?
Isn't it amazing?
Oh, clap, clap, clap.
And somebody would always say, yeah, it's weird.
Like, he's just kind of a normal guy.
And she'd go, isn't it incredible that he's able to bring himself
to our level and just relate at that level.
Because he was also one of the things that you were told
is that he scored like one of the highest IQ tests
in the world.
Did he just make that shit up?
I'm pretty good at that.
That's a fuck of a way.
Oh, yeah.
It's like Kim Jong Il saying that he beat Tiger Woods at golf.
Like, it's a trap.
He's the best bested that ever bested in everyone else's.
The worst worst test. It was a take home test. the best best and that ever bested and everyone else is the worst.
Worst test.
It was a take home test and he had a bunch of women
helping him fill it out.
Of course.
That's amazing.
Two on the nose.
Isn't the other.
That's how we got that.
Speaking of Trump, the dynamic of isolating
is this idea of preempting that the people that are
in your life pre you being part of this
will not understand. They will resent and be jealous of your evolution. So they will say that
this is occult. They will say that this is bad. And in a way that kind of perfectly insulates you
And in a way that kind of perfectly insulates you because whenever people express concern, you're like, oh, it's working.
Yeah.
What I'm supposed to be doing is working, which is the exact same disaster cycle of calling
media fake news.
Because then anytime someone who is in the MAGA sees that there's any news
report about anything bad that's happened, it's further evidence of the
underlying doctrine which is the media is going to try to take us down because
we're so great. Yeah. It's good. Everything becomes propaganda. Yes, which is the
second thing in the in the bite model. So we've talked about control of behavior
and then control of information
And we were specifically told not to read the articles about Keith because that would be dishonorable
What's being said about Keith is dishonorable? You wouldn't want to change our internal representation of Keith
That would be violent
We just didn't even read it
Wow
And that's so much control of information that's huge right now control of thoughts
We could do like an hour podcast on each thing
and all the different subcategories,
but just to give the overall structure
to Steven's bike ride,
it's really, really helpful.
And his books have helped me a lot.
Also, I would say for anyone listening
who thinks they have a family member in a cult
and they want to know what to do
or how to approach it, his books are great.
Wow. Wonderful. Control of what to do or how to approach it. His books are great. Wonderful.
Control of what was the B? Behaviour. Behaviour, information, thoughts. The emotions. It's
so just because of like the work that we do here and untamed, I know that we all can't
live all of our lives based on our all of our emotions. There's a ways of using emotions
as information, but it is fascinating to me the emphasis of what you were taught at Nexium, that emotions were really something just to overcome.
Yes. That this idea of state, of state of being, that something happens in the world,
something happens in the world, and then you make meaning of it in your mind. And then you have
an emotion about it. So whatever the emotion is, you have chosen
by the meaning you make.
So if somebody says to me, you are a total fucking asshole,
then I make meaning in my mind
that that person is mean and doesn't like me.
And so I feel angry and sad,
but that means that I have chosen that anger and sadness.
And so I have made myself a victim. That is
my problem. Or I didn't have to think that. Or the meaning that you attached to what asshole
is based on your life. Right. So you've attached meaning to that. And because they've said this,
now you are a victim to this thought, this emotion. And it's only up to you to be able to what is it called
stimulus and response. So you have to break the stimulus so that your response
is different. But my point is that like wow is that the opposite of what we
try to encourage which is that when a woman is angry or heartbroken, that that is a signal
to her, that we're not always acting exactly upon our anger. But that that is a signal,
not that there's something wrong with us that we need to change internally. But perhaps
it's an arrow pointing towards something in this family, in this relationship, in this
institution that should change. and it's valid.
Yes. So, what an abandonment of self. I mean, that's to be a key to all of these groups is just the recurrent encouragement of abandonment of self and deference to a different authority.
Exactly. There's an example you give in your book about how Abbey is able to relax
example you give in your book about how Abby's able to relax and it causes you go into violently tidy.
Lately, yeah.
So I do the same thing when Nippy and we're still working on this, but I was laughing
because what you described in your book and your enravelling of that is kind of what
I would have looked at as how I would EM somebody.
Is you looking at, okay, it's not really about Abby,
I mean, yeah, I'd be relaxing.
It's about what does it mean about you, right,
that you can't, and then that memory came up
about how like your parents would come home
and then you'd have to show your productivity.
And we dig in around how your productivity is separate
from your worth and your worth stuff,
whether you produce or not,
and then you'd be able to be you and relax or not relax, and Abby's
chillness wouldn't trigger you.
That's what a good EM would have looked like, right?
So the tool of an EM and breaking a stimulus response could have been healthy, and I think
there was times that it was, but it's a tool.
So it's like the knife in the hand of a murderer or the knife in the hand of a surgeon. So if Abby was doing something more destructive, like say branding people,
England and you were like, I don't like that. That bothers me. I can say, well, why does it bother you?
And take you down a path where the branding doesn't mean that. And what it means is just a symbol for people's growth.
And that's what they're doing at a sorority, which is a really positive thing.
And I can change the meaning for you versus you coming up with the meaning of yourself about yourself worth and not being reactive to it.
So that's what he did.
He changed people's reaction to something horrific.
Something that people should and have been in the world completely outraged by.
That's the manipulative piece is that there were aspects of the reaction, the work with emotions that were really healthy and good, similar to what you've talked about, and then twisted for someone's goes back to intention.
Intention or the extreme of it. That is so powerful. And it's this wild paradox because there's one person who's the alleged genius
at the top who is the all-knowing.
And yet, every single person is responsible
for everything that happens to them.
So like if something terrible happens to someone else,
you called that into yourself.
You made that happen.
What did you do to make that happen in your life?
So you are perversely responsible for anything
that is bad going on in the group toward you,
but you are not able to rely on your thoughts or emotions.
Mm-hmm.
Which is a huge inconsistency.
And that's another one of my red flags,
is when the dogma is inconsistent,
and I'm sure you've seen this where it's like,
you know, Jesus loves everyone except for gay people.
Right.
Usually inconsistent.
That makes no sense.
Or Jesus writes us to beat all of our weapons
into plowshairs, but please vote for more guys.
Right. Right, right, right, yes.
["The
R&B
of the
World." When you were saying about how there's like really valuable things to be taken from what you
learned and it's just whether you're following it with kind of enthralled passion and it's got
to be your whole world. It reminded me of Amanda Palmer posted something that said I was,
I was totally devoted to evangelicalism when I was a kid because I always felt so moved
during worship songs at my mega church.
Then I felt the exact same way at a one-direction concert and realized I was just devoted to live
music.
No, but that's right.
It's like this feeling.
Yes.
So there's like, there might be a similar thing that is really good.
It's just that maybe you can have that
without attaching your family, career, life,
and every aspect of your being to the community.
Which they tell you is the opposite of what you should do.
That's not a solution.
And that was the other red flag on my list is like,
what happens when you leave the group?
Can you leave the group without being shunned,
without becoming a villain, which is 100%.
I mean, people came and went from Xium in the early days
and it wasn't a big deal.
It's when they left and they had something bad to say.
And then they would always be a lawsuit
or they'd be dragged through court.
And the main thing that I say to people when they're like, but how do I know if this group is good?
I said, well, have people left it? Is there any smoke? If there's smoke, there's fire.
If you ask the leadership, what about this person who's saying X, Y, and Z, and there's a lawsuit,
how do they respond to that allegation? Are they saying, oh, that's just a lover scorned, huge red flag?
Or they're responsible in the way that they handle it is,
you have to discern that and you have to do your research.
But ultimately, most of these groups have some sort of lawsuit or allegation
that's probably true.
Sarah, I want to end with a couple things.
First of all, I know so many people who leave the church,
right, who leave evangelical church
or whatever, because they can't anymore, because of the dogma, because of the danger, because
of all of it.
But there's a real loss because it's like the groups that are a little bit culty have also
managed to create, whether it's good or real or whatever, but this closeness of belonging
like that we all kind of want and it feels like so hard to get. Is there a loss?
Yes, there was a huge loss. Like we called it the cult shaped hole in my heart.
I lost a lot of friends very quickly and I also figured out who my real friends were very quickly.
I just wanted to tell the Pog Squad that Sarah, you sent me your book,
Scarred, and in that you wrote that one of your
manifestations was to dance with Abby and me to closer to fine
by the Indio Girls. And I read that a few times and I just thought it was so
beautiful and interesting that you chose that song
to write in the book because that song,
which we love so much, is about, you know, spending our lives looking for some kind of answer.
Like we went to the doctor, we went to the mountain, we went to this college, we were always looking
for some set of rules, somebody that knows some solution or answer, and then finally discovering
that there is none, that the answer is an answer. And the answer
is that there is no freaking answer. And that you will never solve yourself and you will never
solve other people and you will never solve the world that there is no a's behind the curtain.
And that there is a way to come a little bit closer to peace, which is finally being fine
when we stop begging
for something definitive.
Like the actual repetitive line is,
the less I seek my source for some definitive.
For some definitive.
The closer I am to find.
Yeah.
Seekers gotta seek.
Yeah.
It's so funny he break it up
because I was in preparation for this.
I like did yoga and like took the morning and myself
and just like really wanted to get grounded. And I had that song playing. I was like preparation for this. I did yoga and took the morning and myself and just really wanted to get grounded.
And I had that song playing.
I mean, I've been playing that song for 20 plus years.
I never thought of it that way.
And I was playing it in my head in yoga.
I was like, the closer I am to fine.
That's what we're just trying to be as fine.
And not even just closer to it.
Just closer to it.
Yeah, just closer.
Finding that balance.
Yeah, crazy. It's that balance. Yeah, crazy.
It's just trying to like,
woof, yeah.
So I do appreciate that.
I do appreciate that.
Letting go of all the all the memos.
All the memos and all the memo we got
that we have to find an answer
and then it's right around the corner
and somebody else has it.
It's just us.
Always the return to the authority of self
in life is what you say over and over again.
And Bonnie says, which is like remembering
that I am the authority of my own life.
And not only pushing that to any damn body.
And that's where you to answer your question about earlier.
That's what my journey has been as my own inner belonging and then close to me,
my family, and as best as I can in a not culty way,
the community through the podcast of just people trying to heal and offer the tools that I've
Learned to others people leaving cults or avoiding cults or getting people out of cults. It's very meaningful to me and
Healthy, I think always questioning it. I think we should say I think at the end of everything
That's what I do. We say strong opinions very loosely.
You are such a badass there.. Thank you for being so.
We love you, Sarah.
Be in touch.
Pod Squad.
Thank you, you guys.
This is a dream come true.
As you go through the week, just
try to be a little bit closer to fine.
See you next time.
Bye.
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