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Coping with Cult Involvement: A Handbook for Families and Friends
Livia
Bardin, M.S.W.
Published by:
American Family Foundation, Bonita Springs, Florida, 2000
Reviewed by
Doni
Whitsett, Ph.D.
Livia Bardin’s “handbook” is a welcome and much-needed
practical guide for helping not only families and friends but professionals
working in this arena to evaluate the nature of a “suspicious” group and the
effects of it on their loved ones. The book’s stated goals - “to help [people]
gain perspective on such situations, conduct a systematic evaluation, assess
realistically what, if anything, [they] can or should do about it…” (P. i) - are
clearly met. The information is solidly grounded in the cult literature
developed over the past twenty years and is expressed in easy-to-understand,
non-jargon language. The author acknowledges the difficult task families and
friends have in sorting out the various pieces of the puzzle, and validates the
intense emotions aroused by cult involvement, which often results in impulsive
actions and angry outbursts. Nevertheless, the author exhorts the reader to stay
calm, assess the situation, and make a well-thought out plan. Ms. Bardin has
developed several forms to assist in this assessment and strategic planning.
These tools are invaluable in helping families and friends make sense out of
their own observations.
An important point Ms. Bardin makes is that assessment is
dynamic. People and situations do not remain static, they move towards change.
Thus, evaluations should be made periodically in order to take advantage of
times in the life of the cult and the individual when she/he might be more
vulnerable and available for a family intervention.
In chapter one, Ms. Bardin gives an overview of Basic
Strategies – increase knowledge, stay connected, build trust, and take advantage
of opportunities. Immediately, an overwhelmed reader will begin to feel less
helpless – aha! “there IS something I can do.” It may not be the
“storm-the-compound” strategy that a distraught parent had in mind, but even the
most emotional reader cannot help but recognize the wisdom of these guidelines.
In chapters two through five, the reader is given information
and forms with which to evaluate (1) personality changes observed in the member
and (2) the nature of the group itself. Perhaps one of the most important points
Ms. Bardin highlights is the difference between age-appropriate personality and
situational changes on the one hand (e.g., leaving home, living with a group of
friends, making a decision to change careers) vs. changes made as the result of
undue influence. As the author states, “…a child’s casting off the family values
and beliefs may be legitimate, no matter how painful.” Therefore, she exhorts
the reader to be as specific and objective as possible when describing the
changes observed in order to interpret these changes accurately. She also
encourages a balanced view of groups. A group’s being incongruent with the
family value system or “odd” or otherwise unusual does not make it an abusive
cult, and not everything that someone experiences in a cult is negative or
harmful.
If I had any concerns in reading the book, it would be that it
may assume a level of maturity many people find hard to achieve. Families and
friends are asked to contain often intense emotions surrounding their own values
and needs when dealing with their cult-involved loved one. While this request
may be problematic for many people, I think it is nevertheless important to ask
of the reader that he/she aim for this level of neutrality and containment. By
clearly identifying the kinds of actions that have been found to be most
effective in easing someone out of a cult, the author holds out the hope that
change is possible as is meeting the emotional challenge that may be required
for success. Families and friends will necessarily have to question how
committed they are willing to be to this (often long-term) process if it means
having to make some changes themselves.
For example, in chapter 7 (Communication), Ms. Bardin provides
excellent responses to the many provocative statements frequently hurled at
well-intentioned parents: “You’re Satanic,” “You’re not my real parents,” etc.
She offers possible answers that give the parent time to collect himself, to
think before she reacts, e.g., “I need some time to think about this before we
go on. I’ll call you back later” (P. 54). In addition, a form titled “Listening
and Responding” is provided for readers to fill out, another effective tool in
helping people rehearse (and perhaps memorize) the kinds of responses most
people “wish” they had had the presence of mind to say in the moment. Such
planned and rehearsed responses are crucial, because when we are emotional our
ability to think and reason is compromised, a point the author makes very
astutely.
The handbook also provides practical information on planning a
strategy for intervention, if the assessment reveals that the loved one is
indeed in an abusive group. Pertinent legal information is also noted, as well
as the various options, and myths, regarding exit counseling. In coming to some
decision regarding the best plan to make, Ms. Bardin delineates six stages of
cult involvement: the fringe member, recruit, honeymooner, veteran, habituated
member, and castaway. She also discusses what might be done (and should not
be done) within each stage. Reminding the reader that “It’s tough to
convince any human being to change,” she emphasizes that “Persuading someone to
disengage from a cult means getting him [or her] to abandon a major commitment
to which he [or she] has dedicated his [or her] life” (P. 43). The outsider is
often hard-pressed to understand the sense of loss, grief, depression, and
loneliness that often accompany leaving an abusive group. To help in this
understanding Ms. Bardin educates the reader about the various factors that make
people vulnerable to cult involvement initially, as well as factors that
maintain the attachment and why it is so hard to leave. She states, “To lose a
group is to lose a world.” (P. 48).
In sum, I found this handbook to be an extremely useful tool
in assisting people to evaluate potential cult involvement and appropriate
strategies for dealing with a cult involvement. I would highly recommend it not
only for the lay public but for therapists, lawyers, and other professionals who
might want and need to gain a more comprehensive perspective on a particular
situation.
Related
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Bardin, Livia, M.S.W.: "Child Protection in an Authoritarian Community: culture Clash and Systemic Weakness" Bardin, Livia: "Coping with Cult Involvement A Handbook for Families and Friends" Bardin, Livia: "Coping with Cult Involvement: A Handbook for Families and Friends" Conference 1997: PA Presenter Conference 2001 NJ: Speakers Conference 2002 FL: Events Conference 2003 CA: Agenda Conference 2003 CT: Agenda Conference 2004 AB: Draft Agenda Conference 2004 GA: Events Overview Conference 2005 Madrid: Agenda Conference 2006 CO: Conference Handbook with agenda, bios, & abstracts Conference 2008: Philadelphia home Coping with Cult Involvement: A Handbook for Families and Friends - book review by Doni Whitsett, Ph.D. Cults: Too Good to be True - book review by Livia Bardin, M.S.W. From Slogans to Mantras - Book Review by Doni Whitsett, Ph.D. God's Brothel - Book Review by Doni Whitsett, Ph.D. Ryan, Patrick / Langone, Michael: "Religious Conflict Resolution: A Model for Families" Take Back Your Life: Recovering from Cults and Abusive Relationships - book review by Doni Whitsett, Ph.D. The Boy Who was Raised as a Dog and Other Stories - Book Review by Doni Whitset, Ph.D., LCSW Therapy Gone Mad: The True Story of Hundreds of Patients and a Generation Betrayed - Book Review by Doni Whitsett, Ph.D. Whitsett, Doni & Kent, Stephen: "Cults and Families" - abstract Whitsett, Doni, Ph.D.: "The Psychobiology of Trauma and Child Maltreatment"
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