|
The Strategic Interaction Approach
Steven
Hassan, M.Ed., L.M.H.C., N.C.C.
The Strategic Interaction Approach (SIA) differs from the
approach described in my first book Combatting Cult Mind Control in
several important ways, the most critical of which is the introduction of the
three‑part phobia intervention. In Chapter 10, you will learn how to use this
step‑by‑step approach to help your loved one understand and overcome
cult‑implanted phobias. Until this is done, I have learned, interactions with a
cult member are especially difficult and sometimes even counterproductive.
The SIA also differs from exit counseling in its emphasis
on the process of change, rather than pure content or information. The
exit-counseling model was premised on the fact that the exit-counselor would
have information that was difficult to obtain. All that has changed because,
today, cult critics and former members of various cults are publishing
information about cults and mind control on the World Wide Web. With the advent
of the Internet, anyone with a computer and a modem can network with other
families, obtain assistance from experts and former members, and locate
information in a way that was not possible before.
Because information about cults has become so accessible,
we can spend more time developing a thorough understanding of the cult member,
the group he belongs to, and the friends and family who care about him.
Additionally, in the Strategic Interaction Approach we learn how to identify
factors that make people more vulnerable to mind control, such as learning
disorders, unresolved sexual issues, or preexisting phobias that cults can take
advantage of. We create a model of the parts of our loved one’s authentic self
that were cultivated for recruitment into the cult identity. Understanding
these subpersonalities helps us relate to the cult identity and also helps us
identify, and encourage, aspects of the cult self that are worthy of keeping.
The focus of the SIA is on the growth of the entire family
and support network —as well as on the cult member. Family members and friends
work together as a Strategic Interaction Team. They are asked to participate in
each step of the process, improving their communication skills and enhancing
self-awareness along the way. Team members are given the tools to take care of
their own emotional needs and overcome problems such as low self-esteem,
phobias, or addiction. When each family member takes responsibility for growth
and change, it takes a lot of pressure off the cult member. His perspective
often changes from "I'm the victim, and everyone is here to help me," to "We're
a family, and everyone is growing and learning." In this way, families are able
to model healthy behavior that will inspire the cult member to change.
We will begin modeling that change by learning to adopt
positive beliefs, productive attitudes, and more effective modes of
communication.
Goal-Oriented Communication
In the business world, the most effective salespeople
expend a great deal of time and effort to develop rapport and trust with a
client or customer. In the normal course of our personal lives, though, we
rarely take the time to learn and practice ways to develop rapport and trust
with our loved ones. This effort can bring much more than money—love,
acceptance, kindness and respect.
The SIA helps family and friends shift from an emotionally
based form of communication to a goal-oriented style. We will no longer be
informal and casual about what we say and do. We will not take our
relationships for granted. Our objective is to grow, change, and develop better
communication strategies that build rapport and trust. When we get the desired
result, we will move forward to the next goal.
Goal One: Build rapport and trust.
During the SIA, you build a relationship with your loved
one that is supported by a foundation of trust and rapport.
Goal Two: Gather information.
Throughout the process, members of the Team gather
information about the pre-cult and cult self, along with the authentic self (a
term I will discuss shortly).
Goal Three: Give information and plant seeds of
doubt.
Once Team members are adequately prepared, they can begin
planting seeds of doubt in the cult member by imparting important information.
Goal Four: Use mini-interactions to promote
reality-testing and freedom of mind.
As they continue to collect and deliver information, Team
members engage the cult member in a series of mini-interactions that ensure the
loved one has the motivation and ability to reality-test and reevaluate their
cult involvement.
Goal-oriented communication encourages high levels of
awareness as well as constant feedback and assessment from experience. Members
of the Team learn how to:
§
Set realistic goals
§
Identify key issues and concerns
§
Assess beliefs and values
§
Clarify motivation and objectives
§
Listen and speak effectively
§
Observe and utilize nonverbal behavior
§
Utilize rapport and trust building strategies
Learning to Understand Others
Team members will learn to interact with each other in a
creative and resourceful fashion. I usually recommend a two day
preparation/training to get the SIA started. If one person says something
hurtful to another, I encourage the individual who was hurt to suggest a more
constructive response to the other person. Each interaction among family,
relatives, friends and the cult member is an opportunity to hone their skills
and to assess what works and what doesn't work. For instance, you can gain a
better understanding of friends and family by role-playing, or stepping into
someone else’s shoes. In the following exchange, I asked a cult member’s mother
to pretend that she was her daughter:
SH (to mother): If you heard your mother say, “You’re
going out dressed like that?” how would you feel?
Mother: I guess I would think my mother was criticizing
the way I looked.
SH: That's what you would think. How would you feel?
Would the comment make you feel good about yourself or your mother?
Mother: No, of course not!
Learning to Express Your Emotions
Process-oriented goals will move us from a rigid position
to a flexible, creative state. We will take steps to find positive,
constructive ways to express your concerns more effectively:
- Acknowledge the presence of a feeling inside you.
- Recognize what emotion you are feeling. Is it
helplessness or fear? Anger or hostility? Sadness or depression?
- Respect your emotions as a legitimate expression of
who you are and what you value as a human being. Dwelling on your negative
emotions creates conflict, tension, and fear. Anger and frustration can
turn into self-hatred and self-pity. It can contribute to such physical
problems as headaches, muscle tension, ulcers, colitis, and high blood
pressure, and can grow into anxiety, emotional tension, or depression.
Ultimately, it can affect your interpersonal relationships.
- Learn how to express emotions that are triggered by
cult involvement in a way that brings you closer to your goals of improving
communication and building rapport and trust. In some situations, you will
want to speak directly to the person:
§
Parent to cult member
§
Sibling to parent
§
Friend to cult member
§
Client to therapist
Focus on your goals. Sometimes, it is more helpful to
verbalize your feelings to someone other than the specific person. For example,
there may be things that would make you feel better but would cause great pain
or even harm if said directly to the person. A Strategic Interaction Therapist
can help you to unburden yourself and make positive suggestions about what to
do. Sometimes, it is a matter of finding the most effective way to say
something. Sometimes, it is a matter of choosing the right time and place to
communicate to get the best response. Over time, you will develop confidence and
know how to adapt your communication style to fit the situation.
Using Feedback to Create a Strategy
The SIA creates wave after wave of feedback and analysis.
Over time, family, relatives, and friends become comfortable with and
consciously adopt this goal-oriented style of communication. After the initial
preparation and training, I sometimes assign tasks to specific friends and
family members:
§
If a Team member is particularly religious, I might suggest that
the next time he’s on the phone with the cult member (of a religious cult), he
could ask that they say a prayer together for God's love and guidance.
§
I might suggest to the father of the cult member that he talk with
his son about his own childhood and his relationship with his father.
§
I might recommend that the grandmother bake cookies and mail them
to the cult member.
After each action, we evaluate the impact based on the
response made to the interaction. For example, if the telephone prayer request
resulted in a double prayer, we ask for specifics. Was the prayer able to build
a positive bridge with the cult member? Depending on the report, I may
recommend a longer, deeper prayer the next time they speak. I might suggest the
religious family member write a letter saying how much closer he has felt since
the prayer.
What was the response when the father told his son about
his childhood and the issues he had with his father? Tears? A hug? A deep
closeness with the cult member? If not, what happened? Was the father standing
up, looking out of a window while he was speaking about himself, or was he
sitting at eye level beside his son? If the interaction went well, I might
suggest a follow-up where the father asks his son, "What could be done now to
build a more intimate relationship with you? What words would need to be
spoken? What behavior would need to be experienced?" The father might need to
convince the son that he is a top priority in his father's life.
If the homemade cookies were gobbled up and shared with
others in the group, and resulted in a thank-you telephone call, then I would
suggest doing it every few weeks, or at least once a month. Why? Because each
time the cult member receives the cookies, it makes him feel loved. The
grandmother can invite members of the group over for a home cooked meal. We
want to build bridges.
With every interaction, you should think of ways to amplify
the positives and minimize the negatives. You want to mobilize a set of
positive, growth enhancing experiences for the cult member to have with family
and friends. The Strategic Interaction Team develops a repertoire of flexible
and creative solutions. Many small- and medium-sized shared experiences have a
cumulative empowering effect. We will work in the least intrusive and most
effective way possible to keep family, relatives, friends, and the cult member
motivated to move closer in small, realistic steps. This work carries us towards
a formal Strategic Intervention, if that proves necessary.
The Strategic Interaction Approach takes time and hard
work. It also takes inspiration, motivation, creativity, improvisation,
flexibility, humor, passion, and commitment. I have file cabinets full of
testimonies from family members and ex‑cult members who say that participation
in the Strategic Interaction gave them a sense of control over the guilt,
anxiety, fear, helplessness, and hopelessness that usually tears a family apart
when their loved one is swallowed up by a destructive cult. The SIA provides a
safe environment where building rapport and trust is the greatest good. A high
level of self‑esteem is one of the most important ingredients to a successful
Strategic Interaction.
Frequently Asked Questions about the SIA
1. What is the goal?
The goal of the SIA is to help the loved one recover his
full faculties; to restore the creative, interdependent adult, who fully
understands what has happened to him, who has digested and integrated the
experience and is better and stronger from the experience.
2. Who is in control?
You are! In all ethical counseling, the locus of control
remains within the client. Strategic Interaction models a non-authoritarian,
flexible, and open process. When you engage a therapist, he is there to help as
the expert on family systems. He is not there to assume control and make all
the decisions. Likewise, a cult expert may provide information and advice, but
will not give orders. Family and friends are empowered to understand the issues
clearly. In this way, Strategic Interaction can be considered self-help. Each
person contributes as best he can, creating a synergy that ensures the whole is
much greater than the sum of the parts.
3. Who is the client?
In the SIA, each person has issues that should be
addressed. The focus is on the growth and development of healthy relationships
within the family. The safe and nurturing environment created by the SIA offers
many opportunities to heal old wounds. As an integral part of the family system,
the cult member is automatically included in the process.
4. When is the best time to act?
The best time to act is when the cult member is questioning
his involvement, is disillusioned, or burned out—or simply wants to leave.
Mini-interactions are designed to help the cult member question his situation,
reality-test, and accept help from family and friends. The SIA is an ongoing
process that makes each telephone call, letter, and visit more effective. Every
time we interact with the cult member, questions are asked and answered, and
information is gathered and delivered. Strategies are formulated, and
opportunities to develop rapport and trust unfold. Positive experiences
accumulate.
If there is a need for a formal three-day intervention, it
is planned when we know the cult member is ready. The time is right when we
know that we have established trust and rapport with the cult member. Many
times, mini-interactions may even make an intervention unnecessary.
5. Will our loved one be treated as an individual?
The Strategic Interaction is a customized approach that
encourages everyone to develop positive, constructive patterns of
communication. Family members, relatives and friends learn techniques to remove
blocks and phobias. The goal is to restore the creative, flexible,
interdependent adult. We want the cult member to understand what happened to
him by helping him fully digest and integrate the cult experience. As the
Strategic Interaction moves into the recovery phase, we want everyone to be
stronger from the experience.
6. Does this approach integrate our loved one's personality?
In Combatting Cult Mind Control I described only a
“dual identity” model: the cult identity and the pre-cult identity. The
Strategic Interaction Approach liberates and then integrates the parts of the
pre-cult identity that were co-opted by the cult identity. In addition, we draw
out the individual's “authentic,” or higher, self and enlist its help to make
new associations with the cult self. For example, we recognize that idealism is
an integral part of our loved one's authentic identity. By pointing out
discrepancies between cult doctrine and hypocritical cult policies, the
idealistic component of the cult identity can be encouraged to begin the
questioning process. Eventually, the cult member becomes disillusioned with the
group and feels motivated to walk out or ask for help.
The Strategic Interaction Approach provides in-depth
counseling which promotes healing. By honoring the authentic self, the pre-cult
self, and the core of the cult self, we help your loved one to integrate
valuable parts of his identity into a healthy post-cult self.
7. Does the method include flexible strategies?
By taking an oppositional, “I’m right, you’re wrong”
approach, deprogrammers and exit-counselors often create a win-lose mentality.
Strategic Interaction encourages adaptability and creativity by widening one’s
experiential base, which results in a win-win environment. For instance, if
family members have never meditated and their loved one is in a meditation cult,
then I encourage them to experience meditation.
8. Is the method concerned with our loved one's spiritual life?
With both deprogramming and exit-counseling, content reigns
supreme. This approach can have hidden dangers. The ideological or spiritual
perspective of the deprogrammer or exit-counselor could be anything from
atheist, to agnostic, to orthodox Christian or Jew. I urge you to scrutinize
the beliefs and affiliations of people who offer to rescue your loved one from a
destructive cult. Many of these people will seek to impose their own
ideological perspective. The ethical approach is to avoid imposing any
ideological or theological viewpoint on a mind control subject.
The SIA allows for a spiritual orientation, but does not
promote a rigid ideological viewpoint. My starting point is always the
individual's and family's spiritual "roots," if any. At the beginning of every
Strategic Interaction, I have family members and friends fill out Background
Information Forms. Often, I find that the cult member had a strong spiritual
orientation before they were recruited into a religious cult. I encourage
family and friends to support their loved one's full recovery—spiritual as well
as psychological.
9. How will we learn the content issues?
The family members, relatives, and friends must
understand the seriousness, scope and depth of the cult experience. I want them
to become familiar enough with the material to be capable of articulating
information about mind control, their loved one's group, and other cults. This
may seem like a daunting task, but the step-by-step, goal-oriented approach we
take will make the work more manageable. After they have been adequately
prepared, family members and friends can begin to attend cult lectures and read
cult literature. These activities demonstrate that they are “open-minded,” and
help to encourage rapport and trust.
Before any discussions about the belief system,
indoctrination, or the leader, we deal with the cult member’s phobias about
leaving the group. Otherwise, your loved one will be under a great deal of
unnecessary emotional stress.
10. How does the SIA handle recovery issues?
Deprogramming is over as soon as the person is out of the
group. People are often left without trained people to follow-up. Consequently,
family and friends are typically not prepared to know how to act as a support
system. After an exit-counseling, former members may try to provide some
support. One might opt for a one- or two-week stay at Wellspring, a
rehabilitation facility in Ohio, or a several month stay at Meadow Haven in
Massachusetts. This depends on the financial resources and the ex-member's
willingness to voluntarily attend.
Cults use fear and guilt to program their members to
believe that their lives are worthless outside of the group. It is hard to
imagine the pain these buried psychic land mines cause when the person manages
to leave. Cult experiences and indoctrination have to be worked through during
an essential soul-searching recovery period, which usually takes months and
sometimes years.
If the person participated in distasteful behavior—if they
recruited people, were raped, became a prostitute, or stole money—it is helpful
that they get ongoing counseling. Otherwise, they will spend the rest of their
lives traumatized by what happened to them, or feeling guilty for what they did
while a member of the group.
During the recovery period, your loved one needs to learn
how to use recovery techniques in order to visualize and work with his cult
identity to reclaim personal history, power, and integrity. He must acknowledge
that he was doing the best he could at the time with the information that was
available to him.
The SIA provides a long-term recovery process for both the
cult member and members of the family. Everyone is traumatized by the cult
involvement, even those who are not directly involved. Feelings get hurt.
Belief systems are assaulted or shifted. People lose sleep. They get
depressed. Anger, frustration, and resentment are repressed. Each person who
has been involved in the traumatic experience of having a loved one in a
destructive cult needs support on psychological and emotional levels.
The heightened sense of urgency that arises when a loved
one joins a destructive cult provides the catalyst for truly remarkable growth,
change, and development. Family members, relatives, siblings and friends are
willing to work hard on their own issues for the sake of their loved one. They
are willing to make commitments that seem impossible under less trying
circumstances. Their rewards are the many positive changes that take place as a
result of working together to bring back a family member or friend lost to a
cult.
Even in those circumstances where an individual does not
immediately decide to leave the cult, there is basis for hope. Many key issues
will have been communicated, especially those dealing with phobias, information
control, and the broader issues of cult mind control. The gentleness of the
repeated mini-interactions will help the relationship to become more honest,
caring and compassionate—setting the foundation for future interactions.
11. How effective is the Strategic Interaction Approach?
The Strategic Interaction Approach has an excellent record
of helping people leave destructive groups. Each case is different and presents
new challenges. Every set of family resources is unique. The Strategic
Interaction Approach draws its strength from love, commitment, and flexibility.
It provides encouragement, momentum, and practical knowledge.
Even when your loved one participates for only three days
and decides to return to the group (which rarely happens), the seeds have
already been planted. In such cases, the cult member usually walks out at a
later date. When a cult member wants to leave the group, he should know that
his family and friends will open their arms with love and support.
12. What is the therapist’s role?
A Strategic Interaction Therapist, by definition, is a cult
expert and mental health professional. Over the years, I have shared my
approach with several individuals, taking them with me on cases and training
them in SIA. I hope to encourage more people to learn my approach and plan to
offer more training seminars and subsequent supervision. Former cult members
with counseling training make ideal candidates for SIA training. During the SIA,
the role of a therapist is to facilitate communication between the cult member
and the Team by encouraging growth within each person. Although it is possible
to empower a cult member to leave without the help of a formally trained
counselor, I recommend that you contact a professional counselor to discuss your
situation and plan an approach. If a therapist with experience counseling cult
members is not available, you should make sure that your counselor has read this
book before you begin preparing for an Interaction with your loved one.
In the following chapters, we will prepare, rehearse, and
then conduct mini-interactions with the cult member. While Team members hone
their knowledge and skills, they are shaping creative and flexible strategies.
Plan A, Plan B, Plan C—we keep our options open!
When the time is right, we learn how to ask the cult member
to spend some time away from the group—time to conduct research and ask
questions; time to reconnect with family and friends. The levels of rapport and
trust will be so high that your loved one will agree to participate in the
Strategic Interaction.
Acknowledgment
This paper is excerpted from Chapter Two of Releasing
the Bonds: Empowering People to Think for Themselves by Steven Hassan, FOM
Press, 2000. It is reprinted with permission of Steven Hassan:
http://www.freedomofmind.com/
This material used in a presentation at AFF’s annual
conference, June 14-15, 2002, at the Crowne Plaza Hotel, Orlando (FL) Airport.
|