This book is about how cults and totalitarian systems operate; how they recruit followers, their modus operandi to retain them, their management arrangement both in terms of framework and power structure as well as information flow and chain of command. The author, herself a former member of a left-leaning cult, The O., also addresses how some fortunate followers manage to escape, what is takes for them to survive after fleeing, and what society can do to help more members escape and, more importantly, what society can do to avoid people getting into cults in the first place. One important message that she promotes—most important one in my opinion—is to break the myth that “strong and secure” individuals are immune from cults! Almost anyone who is living life, with its blips and situational downs, or even benign changes, is vulnerable. It is not personality vulnerability but a situational vulnerability.
In the process, Stein uses many cults and totalitarian systems as exhibits to make her point. She quotes personal interviews with former cult members, and the cults themselves range in variety. Cults and totalitarian systems can be right leaning political, left leaning political (which was a big surprise for me), religious, personal relations of control, nationalism based (Hitler, Mussolini, Pol Pot), eastern, western, African, even one yoga school, Islamic, Christian, Hindu, economy pyramids (Amway), self-improvement schemes (Landmark), Scientology, Social Therapy—anything and everything really! Trump gets mentioned only in passing, and focused treatment of Islamic terrorist cults is about a total of one page (although Islam based cultic experiences are used all through). This is good because the book is about how normal people get entangled with cults and are manipulated to give up their loved ones and even kill, not just others but themselves, and the book should not be viewed as apologist of cults and cultic behavior themselves, especially of, in the current days, Trumpism and Islamic terrorism.
The main thesis of the book is based on what is called attachment theory. Very simply put, attachment is how a child views the parents as a steady and secure rock to which he/she can return to when feeling fearful or down and, after receiving the loving consolation and relief, can venture back into the world to explore. Secure attachment is normal, natural, and necessary for all human beings even into adulthood. It can be provided by parents, friends, family members, even self. If the initial attachment during childhood was available only intermittently or not terminated with reliable comfort, it can lead to preoccupied attachment resulting in clinginess, separation anxiety, vulnerability to being bullied, etc. On the other hand, if childhood attachment was one of rejection and neglect, it can lead to dismissive attachment which could result in distrust of people, reclusive behavior, bullies, etc.
But the worst type of flaw of attachment is referred to as disorganized attachment. It is when both the source or inducer of the fear as well as the provider of the solution—or the go-to person/group—are the same! That’s what a cult leader and totalitarian groups aim for and achieve with their followers: create an inordinate fear of a dystopian outside world and project themselves as the omniscient, The *only* Truth, and fixer of all problems. They do this by isolating the followers from their original comfort providers and secure havens such as friends, families, including spouses and children, and other groups, as well as from the identity of the self itself. With alternating alarmist talk coupled with humiliation and throwing crumbs of love (“cycle of assault and leniency”), they make the followers feel petrified and nowhere to go—fright without solution situation—making the cult (actually the single leader or the inner most leadership when the leader passes) the only secure place they can turn to, only to be told to do what the cult leader wants them to, including abnormal sexual activities and abuses, sometimes forced celibacy and even castration, even kill others and themselves! Imagine that for a moment and let it sink in.
Recruitment, brainwashing, and indoctrination methods are described in detail. The isolation from family and a condition of fright without solution results in a neurophysiological condition of dissociation of critical thinking and analysis of the fear situation to take logical and self-preserving action (left-brain activity) and the emotions (right-brain, implicit memories)—specifically the malfunctioning of the orbitofrontal cortex of the brain—leading to debilitating inaction, freezing, and total surrender which is milked by the cult leader. This disassociation becomes the signature to characterize and diagnose disorganized attachment, and Stein provides a method called Group Attachment Interview (GAI) to do so. The final chapters talk about support systems for those escaping the cults and how recruitment can be avoided in the first place. However, in an “age of fragmentation,” societal and community education for cult prevention and avoidance can be a whole book by itself. This book is especially helpful to recognize the deceptively friendly, underhanded storefronts which all cults have, and avoid getting sucked into them before it is too late.