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How We Survived Growing Up in Apocalyptic Cults.

Growing up in a cult: the Children of God and the Exclusive Brethren.

When you’ve been preparing for doomsday your whole life, and the world doesn’t end, how do you go on living?

BY DAVID EPSTEIN

Pop culture is obsessed with cults, but what does it actually feel like to grow up in one?

On a recent episode of How To!, two former cult members opened up about their childhoods in apocalyptic cults. Michael, our 30-year-old listener from California, shared his experience in the Children of God cult, infamous for celebrity ex-members like Joaquin Phoenix and Rose McGowan, who grew up in it as children, and for its allegations of sexual and physical abuse.

Rebecca Stott, meanwhile, revealed what it was like growing up in a cult in England called the Exclusive Brethren, a journey she chronicles in her memoir in the Days of Rain: A Daughter, a Father, a Cult.

What did Michael’s and Rebecca’s childhoods actually look like? And have they ever been able to move on? This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.

Michael: For many years now, I’ve struggled to reconcile the fact that I love and care for my family with this shame that they raised us in an apocalyptic cult. I was born in Thailand as one of 12 children. We grew up in what I was told for most of my life was a missionary group; later, I found out it was a cult called the Children of God. We were taught from a young age that the world was going to end—I believed I wasn’t going to live past 6 years old. We were reading about how to prepare for the coming of the Antichrist, the raining fire, the fissure, and the rapture, all that stuff. I just remember being afraid all the time.

So of the 12 of us, there are four who live on the street. I remember asking my father, “How many of their problems do you think are caused by the fact that they were raised in a cult?” And he didn’t have a good answer. It’s almost like he didn’t think it was a problem. I think I’m beyond being hurt now. It’s not really a question of hurt. It’s more that I just want my parents to admit that they were wrong to raise 12 children around an apocalyptic cult full of pedophiles.

Rebecca: Yeah, so there were really a lot of similarities with Michael’s cult. We were called the Exclusive Brethren. We also were taught that the rapture was coming and that if we weren’t on the right side of the line, we would be left behind to face the tribulations.

We read the Book of Revelation again and again. Meetings were an hour long. Women weren’t allowed to speak. The men had absolute authority in their homes and in the communities. You lived in constant threat of being excommunicated. Everything was banned—no radio and television, no holidays, no pets, no wristwatches. We had no radios, but my father liked to listen to the cricket scores in the back of the car, so every now and again we would see him taking a radio out of the wheel section or underneath the car and listening to the cricket scores. I remember thinking, Am I supposed to denounce my father?

I’m 56 now, and I still have nightmares. I still sleepwalk sometimes, and I still have high levels of anxiety. But I would also say I’ve learned to live with it all. God, this is going to sound very twee and a bit Pollyanna-ish, but I’ve learned to use it in my writing. In terms of my imaginative world, as a small child, we didn’t have books, so I spent a lot of time playing these strange biblical fusion games. I suppose what I’m trying to say is that I have come to appreciate the ways in which that strange childhood, painful though it was, fearful though it was, actually produced some quite rich things too. I am a unique person because of it. But I still have such a strong impulse to run.

Michael: 100 percent. I’m always looking at apartments in other cities. We would always be on the move. Within a year we’d move like six times. To this day, that’s a sensation that I almost enjoy. I like the feeling of being on the go, but I know it’s rooted in my childhood in the cult, so it’s a bit dangerous.

Rebecca: Yeah. For me, when I’m sitting late at night looking at other houses in other cities, I’m looking for the place that’s safe. Even when I bought this house in Norwich where I live now, one of the things I found myself doing late at night—when I realized what I was doing, I laughed—I was checking for flood warnings. I suddenly realized: You’ve always bought houses on tops of hills because you’re afraid of water-level rise and that’s because you were raised to think the tribulations will bring mass floodings.

[slate.com]

LiterateHiker 9 Mar 8
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2 comments

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1

Wow, really interesting. Michael’s response about getting his parents to admit fault I found interesting, in that has he thought about what that might result in? Denial is a strong coping mechanism.

1

The damage done to people who were in Cults like this must be severe. An apocalyptic cult full of pedophiles can't be good for your mental health. I think we can all agree on that. The line between Religion and a cult is not that clear to me. Cults do differ from most religions in that they demand Blind obedience from their members and they do their best to separate you from other groups in society. But all of the worlds Religions have at some point in their history behaved like a Cult. Catholics up until very recently covered up for the child abuse their Church was visiting upon there communities. Now that's cult like behaviour. The Spanish inquisition lasted for over 250 years. The Protestant Religion had Calvin who made the Taliban look like a walk in the park. Living under the Taliban or ISIS for a woman must feel like a cult. No education, No music, no art and body shaming of women sounds like a cult to me. We have seen both Christian and Muslim religions behave like that throughout history. As for buying a house on the top of a hill because of flood waters.....with Global warming, there could be something to be said for that one?? lol

Considering some of the beliefs and things that are asked of people in mainstream religions (like blowing yourself up so that you can have 70 virgins) I suspect that the only difference between a cult and religion is the number of people in it. Religions have enough people that their weird ideas become normalised

@Cyklone My thought exactly.

Though it has to be said that, to use a metaphor, diseases with violent symptoms, which kill quickly a high percentage of victims, usually burn out quickly, however infectious they are and however fast they spread. But diseases with only mild symptoms can often spread across the whole population. In other words extremism spreads quickly but moderation brings persistence.

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