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From Deprogramming to Thought Reform Consultation
Presentation by
Carol Giambalvo
Discussants:
Joseph
Kelly
Patrick Ryan,
Hana
Whitfield
AFF Conference,
Chicago, IL
November 1998
Deprogramming
Early on, according to what
some "old-timers" have told us, groups such as the Children of God allowed
parental access -- even visits to the group -- until a number of parents were
successful at convincing their adult children to leave the group. Then the
Groups began severely restricting parental access.
In the mid-1970s parents
began reporting their adult children's involvement in new religious (and some
non-religious) groups that many call cults. They reported rapid personality
changes and concerns that their loved ones were dropping out of school, shunning
previous friends and family and devoting themselves full time to working for
these strange new groups to which they pledged their total allegiance. Many
parents concluded that their children had been brainwashed.
Parents were doing what they
could to rescue their children from what were perceived as dangerous situations.
Through trial and error, the controversial process of deprogramming developed.
In the 1970s it became the preferred means of rescuing a cult member, as to many
it was perceived as the only way a cult member could leave a cult. As we witness
today, this is a misperception as thousands of cult members walk away from cults
annually. In fact, in very unofficial polls taken at conferences and AFF
recovery workshops, the majority of people attending are walkaways. But at the
time, families based their decisions on the prevailing information. And a good
part of that decision was based on the fact that in some groups, members were
zealously protected from parents, often having their names changed and moved
from location to location.
We must add here that not all
deprogrammings were "rescue and hold" situations. There were some where the
group member was free to leave at any time and there were some where ex-members
sought voluntary deprogramming.
But for our purpose today, and in our thinking, we will use the term
deprogramming to mean an involuntary situation, exit counseling to mean a
voluntary situation, and thought reform consultation to mean an entirely
different approach and we will seek to explain the differences and the history.
Media coverage -- even to some extent today -- hyped the drastic deprogramming
approach and further spread the concept that it was parents' best, if not only,
option.
Deprogramming was controversial because it involved forcing a group member to
listen to people relate information not available in the cults. Some state
legislatures passed conservatorship legislation to legalize the process, one of
which was vetoed by the governor. Later the opposition to deprogramming and the
recognition of the effectiveness of less restrictive alternatives grew.
In
deprogramming, group members were sometimes abducted from the street; although
more commonly they were simply prevented from leaving their homes or a vacation
cabin or motel. Deprogramming often succeeded in extricating the family member
from the cult; nevertheless it failed more often than many realized and
sometimes lawsuits were filed against parents and deprogrammers. In a few cases
arrests and prosecution resulted.
The actual process of a
deprogramming, as we see it, differs a great deal from voluntary exit
counseling. Some of the ideas about cults and brainwashing prevalent at the time
contributed to that process. It was believed that the hold of the brainwashing
over the cognitive processes of a cult member needed to be broken -- or "snapped"
as some termed it -- by means that would shock or frighten the cultist into
thinking again. For that reason in some cases cult leader's pictures were burned
or there were highly confrontational interactions between deprogrammers and
cultist. What was often sought was an emotional response to the
information, the shock, the fear, and the confrontation. There are horror
stories -- promoted most vehemently by the cults themselves -- about restraint,
beatings, and even rape. And we have to admit that we have met former members
who have related to us their deprogramming experience -- several of handcuffs,
weapons wielded and sexual abuse. But thankfully, these are in the minority --
and in our minds, never justified. Nevertheless, deprogramming helped to free
many individuals held captive to destructive cults at a time when other
alternatives did not seem viable.
Exit Counseling
Gradually, not only did the understanding of the process of thought reform grow,
but the voluntary approach of exit counseling proved to be effective -- and less
risky psychologically as well as legally. A few individuals committed themselves
to doing exit counseling and refused to do "involuntaries."
Even within the exit counseling field, further branching off has occurred. Some
tend to be technique-oriented and/or advance a particular religious perspective.
Others are information oriented. They introduce themselves as individuals with
important information. Although they may have a preference regarding how the
group member chooses to respond to that information, they take pains to avoid
manipulating the group member.
One model for the process is described in the book Exit Counseling: A Family
Intervention. The primary difference in exit counseling is its voluntary
nature but there are other differences as well. Much more emphasis is placed on
assessment, using a pre-intervention interview and information form that enables
the exit counselor to determine the concerns specific to the family and the
group member and to weed out interventions wanted by families for an agenda not
appropriate to the undertaking of a serious intervention in an individual's
life; for example, Johnny is about to marry someone in the group of a different
race or culture or Johnny isn't attending xyz church any longer. These examples,
by the way, are few and far between. For the majority of the time we see
responsible families seeking help for legitimate concerns. We need, however, to
be careful that we are not placing those concerns there or exaggerating them.
There are some situations where an intervention is not possible under the
present conditions, for example the family has no access to the group
member. Some families are referred to knowledgeable mental health professionals
for some work prior to planning an intervention. Emphasis is placed on family
communications with the group member and education about the specific group,
what it teaches, what thought reform is and how it works, and the recovery
process.
The process itself differs
from deprogramming, in our opinion, because it is a much more respectful
approach, it is non-confrontational, the exit counselors have to prove their
credibility, there is much more interaction with the information
and it seeks a primary cognitive rather than a primary emotional
response. Very seldom is a visible "snapping" moment seen -- but a
gradual increase in interest, interaction, and feedback with the information --
often accompanied with an increase of interest in and interaction with the
family.
Let me also say here that
exit counselors realize that an intervention is only the first step. If the
person decides to leave the group there is a long road to recovery, that can
take leaps and bounds if the individual is afforded the opportunity to attend
Wellspring, but they need much more emotional, psychological and cognitive
support and if there is no system set up for that support, it may be
unethical to do an intervention.
Thought Reform
Consultation
In the 1980s many attempts
were made by individuals doing interventions to get together to find ways to
improve our profession and ourselves. But a difficulty arose in the definition
of exit counseling and deprogramming. Some helping organizations at the time
contributed to that confusion by maintaining a position that there were
voluntary and involuntary exit counseling and voluntary and involuntary
deprogramming. As a result, without the ability to establish a clear-cut
definition, at those meetings people who called themselves exit counselors but
were doing involuntary deprogramming could not be excluded and our work to
establish ethical guidelines and a more professional approach spun its wheels,
so to speak. A group of individuals who had committed themselves to voluntary
interventions only began to meet regularly to share ideas and information and to
develop Ethical Standards. We formed an organization of Thought Reform
Consultants and eventually published our Ethical Standards. Those Ethical
Standards were patterned after the Ethical Codes or Standards of the following
organizations:
-
American
Association for Marriage & Family Therapy
-
National
Association of Social Workers
-
Standards for the
Private Practice of Clinical Social Work
-
American
Psychiatric Association
-
National Academy
of Certified Clinical Mental Health Counselors
We worked diligently to
combine those standards with some uniquely necessary to our profession. And we
owe our gratitude to the following advisors for their professional support and
encouragement:
-
Margaret Singer, Ph. D.
-
Michael Langone, Ph. D.
-
Herbert Rosedale, Esq.
-
David Bardin, Esq. and Livia Bardin, M.S.W.
-
Bill Goldberg, M.S.W. & Lorna Goldberg, M.S.W.
-
Paul Martin, Ph. D.
-
Thought reform consultation involves much,
much more family preparation. It is necessary for a 2-3 day, sometimes more,
formal family preparation involving all members of the family team and all
thought reform consultant team members. This formal preparation accomplishes
the following:
-
The family team experiences how they work
together under pressure and how the thought reform consultants work together
-
Enables the thought reform consulting team to
observe how the family works together under pressure and who may or may not
be appropriate for major roles in the intervention
-
Improves family communication with the group
member
-
Enables the family to understand the culture
of the group, its teachings and how thought reform techniques impact the
group member
-
Prepares the family for how to communicate in
the intervention and what practical arrangements should be made
-
Emphasizes the recovery process and their
responsibility in it
-
Emphasizes the seriousness of an intervention
and all its repercussions
-
Facilitates the family in making a fully
informed decision about doing an intervention
Thought reform consultation
involves even more assessment, as you see -- and places much more responsibility
on the family. They realize that a team is not just going to come in and perform
some magical process and things will forever be okay.
In both exit counseling and
thought reform consulting, the purpose of the intervention is not
to get someone out of a cult. While that may be a desired outcome, the
purpose is to give the group member the information that enables them to
make a fully informed choice. |