Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Armchair Anonymous: Cult
Episode Date: March 15, 2024Dax and Monica talk to Armcherries! In today's episode, Armcherries tell us about a time they escaped a cult. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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Welcome, welcome, welcome to Armchair Anonymous.
Ooh, juicy episode, Monica.
What do we got?
Cults. Wow, really juicy What do we got? Cults.
Wow, really juicy.
This one runs the gamut.
I left this episode with tremendous heartbreak
for people who grow up in some of these.
Me too.
Micro-cultures or cults or whatever you wanna call them.
Ooh, culture, cult.
That's where it comes from.
Wow, we never thought of that.
I think I say this in the episode,
but even though we tell people not to listen,
and this one's tough to listen to,
I think this is required listening.
Yeah, this one is pretty required listening.
Not that I've never acknowledged this,
but it was yet again another opportunity to acknowledge.
You can start in a pit.
You just get brought home from the hospital
and you don't pick.
And so wherever I've evolved to needs a big old asterisk.
Like I started in a super open dialogue house
where the truth was the reigning principle
where there was justice,
where I could have my own opinion.
Yeah, when I look at where I started to where I ended,
it's probably a 10th of the ground
that some of the people in this episode
have covered in their lifetime.
Yeah.
And flock, I'm so lucky.
I know, me too.
To have been born in Laura LeBeau's household.
Shout out Laura LeBeau, I love you, and I'm so lucky.
And my heart breaks for people.
Yeah, it's tough. It's also juicy though. It's heart breaks for people. Yeah, it's tough.
It's also juicy though.
It's also a great episode.
Yes, it's a great episode.
Oh, before we go, we have prompts for next month.
So, tell us about crazy cosplay,
whatever that means.
I mean, I'm doing this prompt
because I don't really understand what cosplay is.
Am I saying it correctly?
Yeah, okay.
So tell us about a crazy cosplay experience.
Okay, tell us about your worst day.
This is inspired by Alexander
and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day.
You guys both knew that, but that doesn't ring a bell to me.
It's a big children's book.
Okay, so tell us about your worst day.
Tell us your best cautionary tale.
Is that the same as worst day or no?
No, it's not.
Cautionary tale is like a story that when you say it.
Like don't eat the shrimp at Sizzler.
Exactly.
Okay, so this is a pretty wide net.
Okay, and then this one I'm particularly excited about.
Tell us about a crazy experience you've had
as a delivery driver.
That could be UPS, that could be,
that could be any kind of delivery service
where you're entering people's property.
A food delivery, you name it.
Messenger, I was a messenger.
Nate has the, we should almost talk to Nate for that one.
About dropping something off to, yeah.
Okay.
TBD.
Please enjoy Armchair Anonymous, Colts.
Please enjoy Armchair Anonymous Cults. ["Juicy Cold"]
Oh my God.
Juicy cold.
Ooh, this one's gonna be scary.
This one's gonna be juicy.
Hello.
Is this Christina?
It is.
I'm Dax.
This is Monica.
Is it your real name?
It is.
You look young to me.
I'm actually 30.
30.
Oh my God, congratulations.
The big three-o.
You made it to 30.
I did.
And where are you in the world?
I'm in Brooklyn, but I'm actually in the process
of moving to Spain on Monday.
No way.
Oh my gosh, how exciting.
Are you so excited or are you nervous or both?
I'm super excited.
I'm going to move to finally be
with my long distance boyfriend of two years.
Oh wow.
And is he a Spaniard?
He's Venezuelan. Oh my gosh, Ana. Venezuelan, I wonder if he a Spaniard? He's Venezuelan.
Oh my gosh.
Venezuelan.
I wonder if he knows Ana's family.
That's improbable, but it's a nice thought.
It'd be great.
They're a great family.
Did you guys meet online?
No, we met in Spain.
His cousin is my sister's ex-boyfriend.
Okay.
Me cute.
All right.
So you were so crazy to say it, right?
You were in a cult?
You're involved somehow.
There's a cult story.
Yes.
So it starts in 2016.
You're 22.
Yes, at the time.
My dad and my stepmom had just done this self-development course that they were super pumped about called Executive Success Program,
now known as Next.
Next.
Fuck!
Whoa!
Oh my God, I almost got chills.
You did.
Like my brain got chills, but my body didn't.
Yeah, well you might be a-
Because of the malaria pills.
Well, no, you might be a responsive arousal person.
Oh, maybe. Right, right, right.
Okay.
So you were 22 and your dad and your stepmom, they took a course.
And by the way, when I was watching the doc, the courses are good.
They're very similar to many landmark, all these ones that would help you
there's some good stuff.
Find the truth and the story you're telling yourself.
Right.
There's some good shit.
It actually changed my life and my family's life.
My mom and my dad had a really tough divorce.
And after doing this, it brought my entire family together.
And we now spend Thanksgiving all together with my mom and my stepdad, just
cause they were able to go back and heal.
That's great.
A lot of positive came from it.
Not all bad.
Yeah, yeah.
So they ended up convincing my sister and I to do it.
They're like, you have to do this.
We'll pay for you to do the first course.
It's worth it.
We go to this five-day intensive from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. in the photo studio
where it's 20 people, you're sitting in front of a screen
and you watch videos and do exercises
and these videos are like from the 80s.
Okay, okay.
Now, this is probably a tricky thing to go through
because you now have a relationship
or feeling about all of it, but you
have to kind of access what you felt like back then. So I'm imagining at 22, you show up and
you're like, this is so awkward, but pretty quickly in, does it start feeling fun and productive?
Some things were fun and some things were really emotionally hard. There was a lot of crying.
Oh, really?
Because you have to face a lot of fears,
and it's all about separating the emotional
from the actual experience that you have.
Right.
I think that's the positive that you get out of it,
but in it, it wasn't the most enjoyable.
Super exhausting.
I mean, you're there for 13 hours, too.
And were you and your sister kind of having parallel experiences
or was she taking it differently than you?
She took it differently.
She took it very much like,
I am not a fan of this really.
And I was like, I think this is great.
I'm committed, I'm in.
I mean, they start everything with like a pledge
and they have the sashes and I was in a sorority.
So those things to me weren't as
Woo-woo and my sister was the opposite so for her she was
skeptical super and a few months later was this thing they do called V week, which is
Keith Raniere's birthday that they celebrate and they call him Vanguard. Oh, yeah
Well all of these programs have way too many acronyms Scientology's all got acronyms call him Vanguard. Oh yeah, oh my God. And they call him Me-week, ew!
Well all of these programs have way too many acronyms.
Scientology's all got acronyms, they live on acronyms.
Well that's not the weird part,
the part is that they dedicated this whole week
to this whole leader. Well he's the smartest man
to ever live, but he deserves a week-long birthday.
His whole thing was, I'm not here to celebrate myself,
I'm here to celebrate my mother,
she's the one who birthed me.
A lot of faux humility. Yeah. The way I was able to go myself. I'm here to celebrate my mother. She's the one who birthed me. A lot of full humility.
Yeah.
The way I was able to go was because I was gonna volunteer
for the kids camp.
They had this like other program school for kids
called Rainbow Cultural Gardens,
similar to like a Montessori sort of structure,
but it was all based on exposing these kids
to different languages. Sorry, we just laugh, but it has all based on exposing these kids to different languages.
Sorry.
We just laugh, but it has more to do with, we were just arguing the merit of requiring
people to take two years of a foreign language for college.
So you just kind of wandered into the aftermath of that debate.
So it was kind of funny that you just said that. Yeah, it was simple.
So Keith Ranieri agrees with you.
That was funny. I don't believe in that. Because I speak English and Spanish, they were like, even better, more languages, more
cultures, great.
So this is where I was introduced to India, who was one of the women, she tells her story
in the documentary. She was one of the main. She tells her story in the documentary. She was one
of the main women who ended up being in DOS. I was watching Sarah Edmonds and Son, so I
was around all of these really big members, lots of sashes. And I will call her Gabby.
I'm not going to say her name because she's still anonymous in the world.
She was one of Keith's girlfriends.
I didn't know at the time.
She and I got really close because she was the other Spanish speaker.
And Keith would do these big speeches in the auditorium and would sit and talk and share.
And at the end, she's like, I'd love for you to meet Keith.
And she brought me and introduced me to him.
And it felt very much like a presentation.
Now up until this point, so you like the program
and you see the merit in it and you had a good time.
How enamored are you with Keith?
Are you kind of buying in?
Yeah.
The listener needs to know this.
I'm not saying this to make you uncomfortable.
You're outrageously cute.
You're like so cute it's impossible.
So I'm already thinking the girlfriend
maybe wanted to introduce you.
Just like-
To bring in a new girlfriend?
There's no way he didn't notice you.
Wouldn't the girlfriend not want to bring a cute girl?
No, he had tricked all of them.
They were getting more love from him
by getting more girls for him.
I'm sorry, I shouldn't speak, you would know better than me.
Yeah, you tell us, you tell us please.
My understanding is like the girlfriends would go out and recruit new girlfriends.
Yeah, because they wanted to please him and so the more women they could bring to him, the better.
Okay, so you were enamored by him.
Because I was like, wow, this man is so smart. He's taught so many things. He has so many ideas.
And I was 22 and I so wide.
Also your most trusted figures in your life, they're in too.
Your parents like the whole thing.
Yeah.
So I had no second thoughts about anything.
And just after that, I was planning on moving to London.
I hop around a lot.
And they have one of the rainbow centers, the schools in
London and they were like, you should go work there. It'd be so great. And I was like, sure,
that way I have a job there also.
And they paid you.
I mean, minimal. And they have a lot of well-known clients that have their kids there as students.
And what they ended up having me do is one of their clients wanted one of the
teachers to go with them to their house in Madrid to stay with them for two weeks,
to be with their kids, sort of like the nanny teacher.
And I was like, great.
You're like on a wild adventure through this.
It's like all over the place.
I go and this poor kid wants nothing to do with me.
He hates me because he has so many nannies and teachers and people being
rotated and he was four.
He's like, just give me my fucking mom.
He saw his parents 30 minutes a day.
Eventually, because of the stress, I ended 30 minutes a day. That's not fair. Yeah.
Eventually, because of the stress, I ended up having a seizure.
Ding, ding, ding.
Ding, ding, ding.
Congratulations, you guys.
Both really cute.
Did you like it?
Both have epilepsy.
Yes.
Yeah, that's scary.
It was like my second or third seizure, so they didn't really know what was happening yet and what was going on.
And so I ended up going to the hospital and flying back home to California, which is where
I'm from.
And then I was like, okay, I'm sort of done with this.
And Gabby had reached out and she was like, I'd love to continue mentoring you.
Let's try and get you to do more courses and work on these things."
And I was like, A, I can't afford this. This is completely out of my budget. And I have
too much going on. I can't. And that was when I dropped out. But during all of this, my
stepmom and my dad are like full on.
Right. They're going all in.
My stepmom was in all of the women's groups
and going to different events in Mexico
and she was full on moving up the ranks also
and trying to bring as many people in as she could
because she was completely obsessed
with everything that they offered.
Really quick, Christina, when you left,
would you say you were disillusioned at that point
or you knew you had other shit and you just lost interest?
Or were you like, this is weird and I actually don't want to agree with it.
A bit of both.
People are a bit aggressive forcing things on you.
And emotionally people are just on your back of like, I need you.
I want you.
You're so great.
You could see through it a bit.
Definitely.
But I was like, you do you to my parents.
If it's working for you, great.
Oh my God, your poor sister.
Or your lucky sister.
Well, no, she's just like, my whole family's in this.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
As my stepmom gets more involved,
she was having more of the higher ups
also reaching out to her.
Hey, we actually have this sort of discrete confidential group we'd
love for you to be a part of, but to do so we need you to give us collateral.
Yeah.
And for people who have not watched the doc, which you should, it's incredible.
Collateral is going to mean something that you'd be incredibly embarrassed to
get out so that they have some kind of leverage over you to make sure you'll maintain secrecy.
She was very much like,
this seems super wrong, but I also love this.
I don't know what to do.
And finally she was like, this shit's too weird.
Oh, good for her.
So she got to the crossroads and she, wow.
Oh, good.
And because of how high up she was, Oh, good for her. She's good, so she got to the crossroads and she, wow. Oh, good.
And because of how high up she was,
they like black you out.
They sort of shun you.
This is like getting labeled an SP in Scientology,
a Suppressive Person.
You're persona non grata and a threat to everything.
Exactly.
And as more women and more people started dropping out and they started talking,
they're like, something isn't right here. And then finally, when she heard that Sarah Edmondson had spoken up about it,
she decided to be one of the witnesses that went against him in court.
Oh, wow. She was part of that trial. She was part of the trial.
She ended up writing a book about her whole experience
in it too, because it was a lot of ups and downs.
Was she one of Keith's girlfriends?
No.
That's what I'm wondering, like,
I can totally understand being enamored.
The person's like a Dalai Lama or something.
They're on some different spiritual plane.
But when the rubber meets the road,
like when you actually end up in a bedroom with him,
it's gotta be a moment where you're like,
well, wait, this godly creature.
Not if you think so highly.
Yeah, you're in love with him.
Ugh.
I'm happy for you,
because I could imagine he would have very much wanted you
to be a part. You were almost gonna be his girlfriend.
Yeah, yeah, because I watched the doc,
and I feel like you were a bullseye
of what he was looking for.
Yeah, yeah, yeah I watched the doc and I feel like you were a bullseye of what he was looking for.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, ugh, God.
It was an experience and a wild story to tell,
especially when all of the documentaries
and the stories were coming out.
Yeah, it must be so wild for you to watch the doc
and know you were a part of it.
And see all these people that I was with mind blowing,
but I'm so grateful that my family, A, got
a lot of good things out of it and also didn't go too deep.
Also weird to be thankful for it, but epilepsy.
Oh wow.
I mean, literally that might be how you don't end up getting deeper and deeper and deeper.
Are you on Keppra?
Keppra didn't work for me. I'm on Lamictal, Zonogran, and X-Copri because my epilepsy is drug resistant.
Oh, wow.
So every time they put me on one, it'll work and then I'll have breakthrough seizures.
I see.
And so I actually just did a procedure where they test to see if I'm a surgical candidate.
To do a little corridor in your brain? They put in 17 depth electrodes and opened up my cranial
to put in strip electrodes on my brain
and found out I am a candidate.
So next year I'll be getting the surgery.
Oh my gosh, we're sending you lots of love for that.
Big time and then look for the prompt,
have you ever gotten brain surgery?
Oh my God. That could come down the prompt, have you ever gotten brain surgery?
Oh my God.
That could come down the pike.
Have you ever gotten radical brain?
We'll wait till you've done it before we add it.
All right.
Thank you for sharing that.
Yeah, this was delightful.
I hope you have so much fun in Spain.
Thank you.
I'm so excited.
It's time for me to be with my love.
Oh, wonderful.
All right, well have fun.
Nice meeting you.
Nice meeting you guys.
Bye.
I guess she was wearing a medical bracelet.
She was wearing one of those.
Cuffs, she was wearing a bone cuff.
It's fashion.
But also she was wearing a medical bracelet.
Oh, she was.
That was kind of fashion-y.
Yeah, it was cool.
It was pretty.
But what's the name of that one that's?
Tiffany Bone Cuffs.
Tiffany.
Yeah.
But I thought the bone cuff was a big boy like you wear.
Yeah.
I'm talking about the one that a lot of people have.
It's thin and it has circles in it like with the screws.
It's popular.
Oh, I don't know what that one's called.
Okay, I'll figure it out.
It's called.
This is awesome.
It is really cool.
I mean, it's awful.
It's really awful and cool.
Hello.
Oh, wow.
Look at this bizarre microphone.
I know, it lets me know when it's on.
Just for the listener, you're holding a very phallic
and the shaft is glowing blue, it's got lights in it.
And you sound great.
Thanks.
Is this a quadrillion dollars, this thing?
No, I got it on Amazon, it was recommended.
I'm a podcaster as well.
I think I might want this.
It's very high tech.
If we ever did a night episode.
Okay, that's a good idea. It'd be fun to do like an armchair in the dark. Yeah, we can get one. And we very high tech. If we ever did a night episode. Okay, that's a good idea.
It'd be fun to do like an armchair in the dark.
Yeah, we can get one.
And we have glowing microphones.
Do we do that once?
We have gone past when the sun went down
and there's no lighting in here.
Okay, I feel like I have a memory,
but maybe it was a dream where we did one in the dark.
We should do one in the dark.
I don't think we have.
Okay, then I made that up.
And then let's get these glowing microphones.
Ruwan, you have really opened up the door
for a whole new thing for us.
Glad I could contribute something.
Okay, so Ruwan, you were involved with a cult.
I was.
Oh my gosh. Tell us.
Please tell us.
A little over 10 years ago,
do you want me to say how I got into it?
That thing's glowing blue.
It means you're hot, let's go.
I used to watch Ted Talks a lot when I was in college.
One I kept going back to, it was titled Orgasm,
The Cure to the Hunger and the Western Woman.
Oh my.
I was a 19 year old man, so I clicked on it obviously.
It was the founder of the cult I was in.
She gave a talk that was kind of about sex,
but it was really about connection.
And it really spoke to me as a kind of lonely,
very anxious 19 year old.
What was the premise of her TED Talk?
I've heard this one thing that's maybe it's a cult,
but it's about orgasm yoga.
Yeah, orgasmic meditation.
Is that what the topic was of her TED Talk?
Yeah, it was about how she found it,
how intimate touch was a way to deeply connect
in a way that most people didn't connect in society.
So that spoke to me, I never thought about that,
although I was quite socially disconnected
and awkward and pretty lonely without realizing it.
So a couple of years later,
Tim Ferriss, whose books I really enjoyed,
had a chapter, the orgasm chapter in his second book
was written with one taste, the cult I was in.
No one knew it was a cult back then.
That was a couple of years after college
and I kind of decided that I really wanted
to take classes with them.
They seemed to have the answer to my dysphoria or quarter life crisis, if you will.
Or loneliness, we might call it.
All of those things.
I had a lot going on.
They were based in San Francisco, but they were setting up a New York branch.
I started going to their intro events.
I didn't really understand what they were about, but they got me to speak vulnerably
in a way that I was not used to as a,
at that point, 23-year-old.
And one thing led to another.
It seemed like this magical group of people that were
super expressive and could read people in an amazing way.
And, you know, there was sexuality as part of their
practice that was intriguing.
What was the extent of that?
Well, they taught this practice called
Argyrasic Meditation.
It actually is an iteration of a practice other cults from the 60s did.
There's a whole family tree of cults.
Maybe you've discovered this already
with your other interviews,
but it was a practice where a man strokes a woman's clitoris
in a meditative fashion to achieve.
Various benefits, some were greatly exaggerated,
but it was like you feel a level of connection
that you don't normally feel in day to day.
Well, we know biologically.
Why is it such regular sex?
Sure. And we know biologically, yeah, after an orgasm, a woman gets a big release of oxytocin,
which is the love hormone. That is true. You do connect from post-orgasmic activity.
Yeah. The idea is you're entering a state of high sensation together where the man is not
being stimulated. I've worked for them, so I know how to explain this in their fashion of course,
but the man trains his intuition to put his attention on a woman,
which most men are not trained to do.
So I mean within a couple months I moved in with them.
They had a residence in Harlem.
It was a penthouse.
It was kind of like a reality show mixed with like a yoga ashram.
We got up at seven every day.
We did the own practice.
We meditated.
We did yoga. We ate super healthy. every day. We did the own practice. We meditated.
We did yoga.
We ate super healthy.
Did you feel great?
It was amazing.
I mean, the first couple of months,
it was very weird because it was a totally different world.
It was also a female run cult,
which I think is kind of unique.
It was like kind of anti-patriarchal
and feminist and egalitarian
and all about connection and not competition.
So this spoke to me at this time in my life.
And then within a few months, I started working for them.
That's when I started to see the dark side
of how they mixed sex and seduction in with sales.
I mean, a lot of it was driven
about trying to get people's money essentially.
They sold personal development courses
for really high prices.
A lot of people went into debt,
including myself, to pay for their courses.
And I was basically in for two years and I saw a lot of things that were both
incredibly positively transforming for me, but also a lot of the dark side of
human nature, people getting mind fucked and brainwashed and gas lit,
emotionally shattered.
Had you fallen in love with anyone there in that two years?
Could you have a girlfriend?
Yeah.
Well, one of the things they did, and probably all cults do this to some degree,
is they wanted to control how people fell in love.
So if you entered in a relationship,
that relationship usually was broken up,
and then somehow you'd be encouraged to be with someone else,
but it was kind of within the cult structure.
Because everyone was kind of in love with the cult, ultimately.
That's what they wanted.
I'd also imagine, too, like, when you fall in love with somebody and then you develop this real bond of trust,
you're gonna maybe start airing some of your questions
that normally you wouldn't bring up to someone
that you don't trust.
So as two people get closer and the trust bond gets there,
they might defect.
It seems potentially damaging for the cult.
It's like they wanted to have control of the reality.
And when you're in love separately,
you kind of have your own personal reality.
So they made people fall in love.
I did fall in love a few times while I was there,
but it was almost under the guidance or approval
of my cult mentor.
Because the cult is kind of like a family.
And my mentor, jokingly, she would say she was my mom,
like a work mom in like a office,
but she actually was my mom as far as our behavior.
But did you have to stimulate her ever?
No one had to do anything.
That was kind of one of their principles,
like everyone acted by desire.
But then they found ways to twist people's desires, of course.
Right.
Right, okay.
So to answer your question, I didn't have to.
I did, because everyone did this, but it always felt weird.
We really did have like a mother-son bond.
Even for her, I think, it's kind of strange for us.
I find it a little comforting because all these men,
when you give them unlimited access and power,
they will indulge in this way.
And obviously we're terrible.
I'm at least comforted that women too will do this.
Yeah, I'm your mother, but also stimulate me.
That's very scumbaggy too.
I think it's a dynamic of power that corrupts people
in this weird way.
You know, one thing that was interesting about this group,
and I think it's because it was female run,
is that because women were encouraged to be expressive
and outward with their desire,
it kind of flipped the script
where women were kind of the hunters.
Yeah.
And a lot of men were like,
ah, please leave me alone for a second.
Wow.
Yes, they were pushing off the sexual advances.
I mean, I got to feel what it's like to be a woman
in like a normal dating environment for that time. Yeah, probably make you more compassionate, I'd imagine.
Totally.
So when did the wheels start coming off?
Within my first year there and I was working for them,
I saw how them using sex for sales and also like romance for sales.
That's when I was starting to get knots in my stomach and like my conscience.
I was having trouble with this because I really looked up to my mentor,
the group itself.
They had helped me a lot.
They did have a lot of wisdom.
I still think that's true.
They also do all these weird things.
So it was a little bit challenging.
But I did spend another year kind of as a leader within the community trying to distance
myself.
But in that year, they became pretty successful in the mainstream.
Like they got endorsements from Tony Robbins and CrossFit and a bunch
of other celebrities.
Inc Magazine listed them in the top 10 female run companies, or top 10 in health and wellness.
They were really blowing up.
Really quick, I just want to put a point on what you just said, which is like, people
have to acknowledge these things have good things to offer, people wouldn't be there.
It doesn't surprise me at all that you say some percentage of it, you still really cherish if it didn't have anything appealing or transformative, you
wouldn't have been there.
Let me just talk to someone from next to him.
Like, yeah, a lot of this shit is appealing and works until you get
into the zone or it's not.
Yeah.
I mean, they had a really good front end product.
I mean, they got you into their sales funnel, everyone in the cult that I was
in, but also culty people I've met.
They all are powerful in the sense that I was in, but also culty people I've met, they all are powerful in
the sense that they can create an effect in you.
And of course they're going to give you a
positive effect at first.
Actually in the X1 Taste community, there's a
saying that one taste shows you your power and
then sells it back to you piece by piece.
Cause like the first few months are amazing when
you're there.
Guys get off porn addiction, women who are
shut down physically have orgasms for the first time or fall in love for the first time in years,
get over trauma.
They really did amazing things in the first six months for almost everyone.
Maybe the move is to go through all of these cults
and just do the first three months and then bounce.
Well, I think if it's an effective cult, you probably won't.
Right, but if you go in with a game plan?
I don't know.
Okay.
Yeah.
Were you starting to have any physical ailments?
Like was your body telling you you're not comfortable with all this,
but you're pushing it down?
The first few months I was working for them,
I was hired with like a bunch of other young people and all of us,
you know, we didn't have a career. Like this is awesome. We're saving the world.
We're going to help people get connected.
And we had this like maybe two month period of barely sleeping, doing all
sorts of stuff over a hundred hour weeks.
We were working seven days a week and not tired.
And we're like, wow, we're like so spiritually charged up.
We're charged up with orgasm, so to speak.
It's amazing.
But of course we all crashed.
Like after two months, we all had red eyes and were zombies and
we're ashamed for being zombies.
Not to be too pervy, but is the dude ever allowed to come in this?
It was an advanced practice.
It was something that only after some amount of time
you were considered able to do responsibly come.
And also like they changed the definition of orgasm.
There's like a sequence of definition changes through every course you took.
Like in the intro class, they said people think of orgasm
from the male perspective of coming. Whereas orgasm for a woman is a state of high sensation.
And then when you take another class, it's like, well, orgasm is also all the
emotions that come with feeling good.
And it's also kind of the Tao, like in Taoism, it's kind of like
Qi in Chinese medicine.
And eventually it becomes God.
Slowly over time, the definition shifts where it's like, oh, the orgasm is telling
or serving the orgasm. And it's kind of joking at first, the first time you say it, but all
of the terminology, it starts off facetious and then you kind of take it seriously because
you've been talking that way for so long. Right. You desensitize your shock to it.
Was anyone in your life, like parents or siblings or friends outside, were they like,
hey, this feels a little...
Culty.
Or did they call anything out?
I joked about it as it being my cult with everyone.
I mean, I just thought that was a good way to talk about it
because it was a strange environment,
but it had so many benefits.
And especially when I was working for them,
I learned how to speak about the benefits well,
that no one could really argue with me.
Oh wow.
Okay, so when does it crash and burn for you?
So after I worked for them officially as an employee
and burned out, I left the company as an employee,
but I was still in the cult, I was still in the community.
And I knew I wanted to leave eventually,
but I was having a great time and I was growing as a person,
I wanted to stay for a while.
But they were putting a lot of pressure on me
to work for them again, because in my eyes at least,
I was becoming a liability
because I wasn't directly controlled by them, but I had some influence because I used to work for them again, because in my eyes, at least, I was becoming a liability because I wasn't directly controlled by them, but I had some influence because I used to work
for them.
I was like the protege of the second in command.
So I kind of had some status.
I reached out to the cult leader, the founder, because I wanted to write a book with her.
I always wanted to write a book.
I am writing a book about my cult experience, maybe ironically, but she agreed to write
a book with me.
But in exchange, without saying it directly, I had to commit my life because that would
have given me a lot of status.
And after a lot of pressure, I just decided I had to leave because I couldn't commit my
life.
And that was basically the choice to commit your life or leave right now.
Well, this is one of the few cults I feel like I haven't followed the trajectory of.
Have they been exposed as one?
Are they still thriving?
Anything happened to them?
Yeah, in 2018, there was a Bloomberg expose
that I was a source for,
and that kind of brought a lot of the negative attention.
The FBI is now investigating them.
The founder was just indicted a few months ago, I think.
There's also a Netflix special that I'm in.
Wait, it's already out?
Last November.
Oh, what's it called?
I gotta watch it.
Oh no, sorry, it was two Novembers ago.
Orgasm, Inc.
Orgasm, Inc., we haven't seen that.
I didn't love the documentary personally, but you know, it was a complicated story to
tell.
You thought it was what, too sensational?
Yeah, I think they went for kind of the typical sensational story structure.
I think they missed the nuance.
And it might have just been challenging because I think the only people that were willing
to talk to them were either really traumatized or men.
It kind of gives like a weird impression because it was a mostly female cult, but I think five of the seven people who speak are men.
Oh, interesting.
What was the ratio?
At least in New York, it was, I think, 60-40.
In California, it might have been actually the opposite,
but the New York part of it was mostly women.
Oh, man.
That's fascinating.
Yeah. Thank you for sharing that.
Yeah, that was incredible.
How do you feel now?
You've been out of it for a while, I guess.
Do you have a hard time reconciling that you were susceptible to that? Thank you for sharing that. Yeah, that was incredible. How do you feel now? You've been out of it for a while, I guess.
Do you have a hard time reconciling
that you were susceptible to that?
I overall had a positive experience, honestly,
even though they did some really bad things.
Sometimes I think,
I wish I didn't have to do something like that.
Like if I wasn't anxious as a teenager,
I probably just would have had a normal life.
It was definitely an adventure.
Right, quite a bit of life experience forever.
Well, Ruan, that was incredible.
I appreciate you telling us that.
Yeah, thanks for coming on.
Thanks for having me.
You don't have a title for your book yet, do you?
Tell us the name of your podcast.
Rwando Podcasts, and the book is Orgasm, a Memoir.
All right, so everyone look for that.
Well, thank you so much.
Good luck with everything.
Thanks guys, bye.
These are phenomenal.
Cults.
There's so many.
I didn't even know about this or he has a warrant. We're not up to date on our docs. Thanks guys. Bye. These are phenomenal. Cults. There's so many.
I didn't even know about this or he hasn't worn it.
We're not up to date on our docs.
Sasha hated sand.
The way it stuck to things for weeks.
So when Matty shared a surf trip on Expedia Trip Planner,
he hesitated.
Then he added a hotel with a cliffside pool to the plan,
and they both spent the week in the water.
You were made to follow your whims.
We were made to help find a place on the beach
with a pool and a waterfall and a soaking tub,
and of course, a great shower.
Expedia, made to travel.
["The Daily Show Theme"]
Hi.
Sorry we're late.
These have been juicier than anticipated.
They've gone a little longer than we were expecting.
No worries, I plan to stay in the same vein.
Okay, wonderful.
So Seth, where are you?
I'm currently in Los Angeles, California.
Oh, okay.
Nearby.
All right, so you were involved in a cult.
Please tell us what happened.
Okay, so when I was 14,
I was accidentally sent away to a cult
against my will for two years.
I wasn't able to communicate with my family for the vast majority of the time that I was there.
It's gonna feel like I'm jumping around,
but it's important for just the context.
We found out years later that the communications
that were allowed were done via email
and were thus altered so that they could decide
what information I was given from my family
and what information they felt my family needed
to hear from me.
Is this a similar situation to like the Paris Hilton thing?
It's exactly that.
Oh my God.
It is, okay.
So the staff at my school had opened a previous school
10 years or so before and it had been shut down.
And mind you, I was 14, I didn't know all these things.
The internet was a baby at this time, it was like 2007.
And I remember hearing about one of my staff members
being like, yeah, Paris Hilton went to our program
and she was airlifted out of here.
I remember being like, Paris Hilton's cool,
you're just saying cool people's names.
12 years later, she's in front of Congress
talking about this and I have goosebumps,
like no fucking way.
Wow. Yeah.
What behavior were you exhibiting
that your parents wanted to send you there?
So externally, my behavior had a lot to do
with like drug use.
At 14, I had done ecstasy, I had smoked a lot of weed,
I was drinking, I was stealing, I had done ecstasy. I had smoked a lot of weed. I was drinking, I was stealing.
I had driven a car illegally.
I was just defying a lot of what my parents wanted from me.
They'd also had a lot to do with like me being gay.
That wasn't something that I had said out loud.
Sure, you were having a crisis.
Yeah, to say the least.
Okay, so you did that for two years, 14 to 16.
Was sexuality discussed in there?
Were they like, hey, no one can be gay?
Was that the premise? Sexuality was off limits completely. We were only allowed to talk about
sexuality in the form of drama, which a lot of times was based in like shame. And a lot of the
staff would use it against us. So there were a lot of times where like we would do disclosure
circles. There was workshops. This whole school program is built off of this thing called CEDU,
C-E-D-U. That's the beginning for all of these programs from Paris' to mine, Provo Canyon,
Discovery Ranch, all before I went, all these places. They use that as the incubator of their
ideas. That's where these shame ideas came from and things like that. And so I personally went
to a school that was supposed to be for 12 to 18 months and they had an
IQ threshold. They specifically wanted to get a hold of people of a certain echelon, people
that they could influence, and people that they felt were affluent or important.
I knew I was a bad kid. I felt that way my whole life. So I went there with the understanding
that I'm a bad kid and this is supposed to help me. It became very clear to me. This
was on a plantation in South Boston, Virginia.
So really beautiful homes on a sprawling area. It was meant to look really nice. And it wasn't
registered as a mental health institution specifically for the reason of protecting
our reputations so that we could get into good colleges. What that really meant was
they didn't have to abide by the mental health laws.
I felt very quickly, this place is really phony,
everybody here is really fake,
everybody's putting on this drink the Kool-Aid
and everything will be fine, and I'm not a Kool-Aid drinker.
I was an obstinate, defiant kid.
It translated really poorly for me while I was there.
We were incentivized in these group attack therapies
to invite each other for like almost any minor infraction
and to then scream at them or accost them.
And like as a group, you were supposed to get in on it.
And that was called doing work.
Really quick, the See Do Foundation,
who came up with that?
Where does that come from?
The guy who started it's been around from like 60s
or the 70s, but it just became more and more popular
throughout like the 80s and the 90s.
And then a lot of these troubled teen industry programs
are based off of his ideas or their ideas.
All right.
And so this is very cadre system communism where you're incentivized to write each other
out and constantly be telling on each other.
So you'll trust nobody.
It becomes really frustrating.
At the time, like I'm a 14 year old who's just like, this feels wrong.
I don't have all these words and all these things to express why this feels so wrong.
But even the staff were duped.
This is the middle of nowhere, Virginia.
No one's from here.
By the way, none of these people are licensed psychologists.
These weren't people who were qualified to be like,
live in residential therapy advisors for all of us.
And they had like caseloads that were way beyond their means.
And we would be encouraged and the staff would participate
in these shame therapies and in these screaming assaults of each other.
Like you'd have like a suggestion box.
And someone's name down so you can make sure they were in group
with you so you can frail the shit out of them.
Oh my god.
And that was terrifying.
And did you feel uniquely picked on by everyone?
Absolutely.
I was a gay southerner Jew.
I came out three weeks before I got sent to this place in the woods.
There's like a wilderness program that's a prerequisite for a lot of this.
And so I went to that, came out there, then got sent to this program.
It very much was like, why do you keep bringing up that you're gay?
We don't care that you're gay,
you have these other things you need to deal with.
And I'm like, actually, I just came out.
Yeah, this is a pretty crucial element.
This is what all the other things are built on top of.
Yeah, I think we need to get into this.
Exactly. But then all of my sexuality was used to shame me.
I had one staff member who knew I felt really dirty and disgusting for things
that I had done at 14, which weren't-
They weren't biblical.
Yes.
She, in one group in front of 30 of my peers, told me, how do you feel?
And I was like, I feel disgusting.
And she was like, that's right.
And if you don't buy into this program, if you don't do what we're all here doing,
you're gonna end up being a dirty faggot
who sucks dick for money.
Oh my God.
This was a reference to something someone else
had said in the group to me.
Oh, I'm sure you just feel like a dirty faggot.
And I was like, yes, I do.
And I'm just like, you play along.
Yeah.
Because you can't fight it.
What am I gonna do, say I'm not?
So dark. This is horrible. That sentence, I've't fight it. What am I gonna do, say I'm not? So dark.
This is horrible.
That sentence, I've said it in my head like a million times,
like a grown woman said to a 14 year old boy,
that like, if I don't do this program,
I don't drink the Kool-Aid, like that was my future.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Nothing else, just that.
Yeah.
Are they trying to pretend like it's school?
Is there like math class also?
They marketed themselves
as a college preparatory boarding school. They
emphasized a lot on like the if you send your kid here we'll fix them
and they'll get such a great education. I was put in isolation
which is out of school suspension and that's their word for it. For six months
I wasn't allowed to go to school so I was like held back. I was set in a room
for 12 hours a day. I had to face forward. Security guards sat in the back
of the room and I was allowed to raise my hand
if I needed to go to the bathroom.
I wasn't allowed to turn my head to look out the window.
I wasn't allowed to turn to look at anybody walking in
or out of the room because the women's bathroom
was also in this room.
And so I was not allowed to make any type of reference
to what was going on.
You're describing like a POW experience.
It's like so fucking wild.
If your parents are only reading edited transmissions from you,
how do you get out of this at 16? What ended up happening was like, this was right around my
birthday. It was about a 16, 17 month mark. At this point, I had had my phone calls taken away,
which you were given one phone call a month. It was monitored. Someone sat in there, listened to
you and turned off the phone call. It became indeclative, which meant crying or saying what
was really going on. So they had removed my phone call.
It was about three weeks before I was,
I was actually kicked out of the program.
Thank God.
Exactly.
And I had called my parents.
They gave me a birthday phone call
and I used it to just say everything.
I was like, mom, it's too far gone.
I can't redeem myself here.
Every group I'm in, I'm annihilated.
I have no interest in building me back up.
I am here as an example.
You guys are wasting your money,
which wow, was this so expensive.
We're talking multiple six figures.
People went bankrupt trying to help their children.
This was just a nightmare.
So I got kicked out because I was just so defiant.
And my parents eventually at some point said like,
we can't keep paying you if you're gonna put him
in this room.
You've done this for six months.
Are you kidding me?
So I got kicked out and sent to another program in Utah.
That's a similar program.
So Utah is the hub of all of this.
Mormons run this whole industry.
And the hubs of Mormons are obviously in Utah.
I'm not saying all Mormons are bad.
I'm saying 90% of troubled-teen industries are run by Mormon.
So I was sent to a different program.
And at this program, when I would tell them
about what the other program was like,
because the new one was registered, they were horrified.
OK, so it was a big improvement.
It was a noticeable difference.
I felt like there was way more structure
and a lot more rules about why and how
versus just the dogma and you'll die
if you don't do what we say.
At the first school, we had this thing called smooching.
At the end of every day, we were all supposed to like
lay together and touch each other and like spoon,
staff included.
Ew!
It was bizarre, because it was so manipulative.
You'd stay at this like heightened aggressive angry attacking like nobody's safe ever. And
then at night they'd be like, no, cut your friends and coddle them and everything's going
to be okay. And we're all in this together and staff are touching you.
It's like beating a dog and then inviting the dog up under your lap. Stockholm syndrome.
Yes. Stockholm. Yes. Yes. Fuck. So when I described
the attack therapies with the smushing alone to the new school, they were like, that's not legal.
Staff can't cut you. I just was so brainwashed at that time. I like to see that I sipped the
Kool-Aid. I didn't really drink the Kool-Aid. I did what I had to to survive. I think ultimately
what protected me and the reason I get to be a normal, well-rounded, successful person in my 30s
compared to the unfortunate percentage of people
who have committed suicide
or have died from overdoses from this school,
is the fact that I inadvertently put myself in isolation.
I think the fact that I missed out on so much of the-
Brainwashing.
Program, the workshops,
I only got to go through two of the five workshops.
And the third workshop is the one
that apparently like breaks your brain.
Well, also like, I think a lot of people listening and be like yeah that wouldn't work on me.
This would work on everyone over a long enough period of time. Like no one's conviction is so
strong when your community around you is all doing one thing. You can only resist that for so long.
It is the reality you live in so you have to contend with that. You live in a one-mile bubble.
You are never not monitored and everyone that trust, the focus is either on me
or it's on someone else.
So if I don't want the focus on me,
I have to kill one of my friends.
Yes, yes, it's Hunger Games.
If you didn't talk in group,
someone would be like, why aren't you talking?
What are you hiding?
Everyone would dog-pile on you,
and then everyone would encourage it because,
well, as long as we're yelling at him,
my ass is safe, sorry, Charlie.
Everyone's just trying to protect themselves.
So did you stay at the Utah one all the way to adulthood?
No, because I was sent away at 14,
this full experience was two years.
So I spent the vast majority of the first program
and then like the last four or five months
I was at this Utah program,
which because it wasn't so mind-fucky,
I could manipulate and play my way through.
I just understood you'd climb the ladder,
muck the stalls, feed the cow.
It was a ranch.
So, I was able to navigate that,
went a little bit better, and get out at 16.
When you got home, did the bad behavior continue
or did it stop?
I'm putting bad in quotes.
The cries for help, did they continue?
I guess I could also say.
The cries for help had different lyrics. Okay.
When I came back,
Karlbrook is the original school,
I can say it, it's been shut down,
doesn't exist anymore,
but I still lived what I call the Karlbrook machine,
which is just like my mental need to process things
through the lens of the people there
and what they wanted from me.
And so once I got out,
I definitely had a Stockholm syndrome.
I first got home, even after the other program,
I was like, I have to go back and prove to them that I can finish this program, that I'm just as good as all of
those other kids and like, I'm not going to die and I can do it.
And my mom was like, you're nuts.
They were not sending you back there and be like, what is going on?
Like, why would you want to go back?
What is your resentment level towards them and what's their guilt level
about this whole experience?
It's been 15 years in February when I got out, it took about 10 years of me
processing before I was able to be honest with my parents about
what had happened.
My father's very empathetic, but if you ask them today, my dad will tell you we had to
do something and we did something.
If you ask my mom, she feels terrible.
I harbor a lot of guilt in the fact that my parents needed to do this.
You felt you put them in a position.
You had put them in such a corner that they were so desperate. Which at 14, I didn't have that conscience.
Yeah, a kid doesn't do that, by the way.
Like, you didn't.
You were a kid.
Right.
But nonetheless, I felt a lot of disappointment in myself
because I know my parents financially took a big hit
to try to protect me.
And I know that my parents did all of this stuff out
of love and affection and care for me and belief in me and my success. And I know that my parents did all of this stuff out of love and affection and like care for me and belief in me and my success.
And I know that ultimately sharing with them that what they did was probably one of the worst things that ever happened to me in my life.
Feels really shitty. Even now, like you can tell I'm a little bit steamy about it.
You will be for the rest of your life.
It's the people that are there to protect you put you in a situation where you were harmed.
I 100% forgive them because I saw my peers,
many of them have died, have overdosed
and did not have the caring, loving parents that I did.
They were sent away because their parents
didn't want to raise them because they were difficult.
They were rich and they just didn't want to deal with it.
My family was none of that.
My parents wanted to protect me from myself.
Yeah.
Fuck man, it's just a rough situation all around.
And then also 15 years ago, the vibe was different.
You'd see these people on daytime talk shows and they're like success stories.
Popular culture is kind of supporting that this is a good solution.
No one's speaking out yet at that point.
No hearing Paris Hilton talk about it.
I know that she's been on the podcast with y'all and talked briefly about all
of that within her long interview.
And it makes me so happy to know that not something like that would happen to her, but
more people like us exist.
That industry still exists.
People are still profiting millions of dollars off of insecure parents who just want to help
their kids.
And it takes somebody like her giving somebody like me or whatever a platform to tell that
story so that like maybe we can fix this stuff.
We could stop doing this to children.
Yeah. Yeah, absolutely.
Seth, I'm very sorry that you had that experience.
So unfair.
I appreciate that.
We appreciate you sharing,
and I do think it will help people to know more about it.
Well, as she was saying, the numbers are outrageous.
There's like tens of thousands of kids
who've gone through these programs.
And yes, just to not feel alone.
The comfort she gave you is that you weren't alone.
That's why fucking AA works.
Exactly.
There's community.
Well said.
Thanks so much for sharing that with us.
Absolutely.
I appreciate you both for having me on and letting me share my story.
All right.
We'll be well.
Likewise.
Bye.
Wow.
That was heavy.
That's heavy.
That's so sad.
I know.
What the fuck? What is wrong with like, who could be doing this to children? Wow, that was heavy. That's heavy, that's so sad. I know.
What the fuck?
What is wrong with, like, who could be doing this to children?
Unfortunately, you have two options.
You gotta either chalk the whole thing up to there's someone evil who wants to hurt kids,
versus, more likely in my opinion, someone really believes this works and they're wrong,
which is even trickier to confront.
Well, it should just be illegal.
We can have regulations that make these things illegal.
Yeah.
Good for Paris.
No shit.
Ow, ow, my knee.
Do you have a bad knee?
Yeah.
Oh.
Hello?
Can you hear us?
I just punched Monica in the knee
and it turns out she has a bad knee.
I didn't even know.
Is it Rosie?
Yes.
Okay, that EI, God, could go any way.
It's because all the rosy I-E was taken.
I was like, I gotta be unique in some way.
Okay, great.
One of my cardinal complaints about the English language
is I before E, except for after C,
but that's not even close to the truth.
There's so many examples.
There's a lot of exceptions.
Yeah, it's a lie.
One of the many lies.
Well, it's a cult.
It's a cult, yes, this English language. Well, it's a cult. It's a cult.
Yes, this English language.
Right.
Okay, so you have very exciting eye makeup on.
Oh, thank you.
And then you have angel wings behind you.
So part of my journey through healing religious trauma has been, there's a lot of cosplay
makeup, that sort of thing.
This was from a demon cosplay that I just ended up putting on the back of my streaming setup here.
And it's very dramatic.
Pretty demon. Those are kind of like white feathers.
I'm going to try to not get derailed on cosplay because I think we need a prompt about cosplay
because I'm so intrigued and dumb about what that means and what people do.
Okay. Cult. Where are you from? Where did this occur? I am a pastor's daughter from the Seventh Day Adventist organization, or what
I refer to online in my content as a cult-ture for legal reasons.
Tell me about Seventh Day Adventist.
Seventh Day Adventists originate in kind of the same place with a cult of
personality, which is William Miller.
From William Miller, you go from Adventist,
the guy who started Jehovah's Witness,
he was former Adventist preacher.
It's all under the same umbrella
of William Miller back in the day.
From upstate New York as well.
With Adventist, that is actually Michigan,
and it's all from a spot called Battle Creek,
and there's a prophetess,
a lot about how the government's going to hunt us down
for our beliefs.
I basically grew up believing that my family was going to be murdered in front of me someday.
We're going to have to run for the hills.
So Battle Creek, Michigan, home of the cereal brands.
Kellogg is one of the founders of Adventism.
Oh wow.
There's a lot we could go into with just Kellogg alone, which includes eugenics, female genital mutilation.
There was a device he invented
to shoot about four gallons of hot water up.
Yeah, he was way into enemas, right?
Oh.
He had like a spa retreat
where he thought he could cure people
of their common maladies.
Yes, so, Adventism and sanitariums go way back.
Did you see the movie about him?
Sir Anthony Hopkins played him, right?
I haven't seen the movie,
but that would probably be a very good casting.
He could play a creepy guy pretty well.
So Adventism is one of the ones
that went almost like an MLM route.
Most people would not see something wrong.
Their basis is their health message.
So people look at it and they're
like, oh, that's a good thing, right? So I was raised on a lot of very odd dietary programs,
restrictions, course, no alcohol stuff, no coffee. Protein is quite often replaced with
soy and tofu, which causes a lot of long term health issues.
Kellogg's obsession was the stool. He was obsessed with having a big fluffy stool.
Yeah, so they're very big on veganism, vegetarianism.
So for myself, I'm about fourth generation Adventist,
at least on my mom's side.
My dad was brought into it through an evangelistic series.
They both met at like an Adventist school.
Adventism is a contained environment.
They have their own hospitals.
They've got their own educational system. Like you can exist within Adventism is a contained environment. They have their own hospitals. They've got their own educational system.
Like you can exist within Adventism essentially
and never really go outside of it.
Like Amish or something.
Practically, however Adventists are very performative.
To look at them, you wouldn't know they do exist
out and about in the world, but they are very much
in their minds, the protagonists of the
planet, as most of these organizations think they are the main characters.
So to them, they'll go out there and essentially you can't work on Saturday.
So you get all of these prescriptions for how to get out of tests, how to talk to employers,
things like that.
There's a lot that's closed off for you employment wise because you can't work on Saturday
or do a whole bunch of stuff.
So Adventism keeps to itself as much as possible,
but it's big money.
This is one of like the big earners in terms of religion.
Where are they primarily concentrated?
Are there big pockets?
Loma Linda is one, Walla Walla Washington's another,
of course, Michigan.
They show up in things like Time Magazine
for the Blue Zones.
Oh.
Adventists are known as one of the organizations
that lives for a very long time
due to their health message is what they claim,
but if you actually look at a Blue Zone,
it's lots of money, very warm climate,
access to medical care,
and so there's a little bit of confirmation bias
in what they sell you with a Blue Zone.
That's so true.
I like you pushing on Blue Zone.
People are obsessed with Blue Zone.
There's some stuff I could say about that
having been raised in it.
And when I was a student,
I was put through their educational system,
especially in university.
The nurses all knew us at the local hospital.
They'd be getting fluids into us immediately
because we would all be low on vitamins, nutrition.
We were all malnourished.
Oh, wow.
How did they deal with that reality that they have an express diet that's
going to result in peak health, but they regularly have to send their kids to
the hospital to get infusions of vitamins?
Like how would they write that off or dismiss that fact?
It's something that they don't necessarily acknowledge
because Adventism, and as a pastor's kid,
I can tell you this, masking is the big thing.
It's all about presentation,
and you don't really want to tell other people
you're having health issues
because then you're not right with God.
So usually what happens is it's not going to be discussed,
you're not gonna be open about it.
Students would be with each other,
but on a higher level, you're not going to be discussed. You're not going to be open about it. Students would be with each other, but on a higher level, you're not going to talk
about it, so that's kind of how it'll continue.
Okay.
So there's a ton of food things.
And then what are the other kind of restrictions?
I don't know if you've seen the shiny happy people thing that happened with the
Duggar family, their whole thing was on the learning channel.
They pumped out a bunch of kids and they got their stuff from a guy, I believe his name is Bill Gothard, and Gothard is one
of the darlings of the Adventist Church. His thing was the umbrella model of
Christian marriage. So consent is not exactly a thing. Your body is owned by
your father and then to your husband. They do an umbrella, God, father, wife, kids,
and then if it's the opposite,
it's Satan, wife, husband, kids.
Interesting.
So then dating, I presume, is completely off the table.
Leave room for Jesus type of dating,
but a lot of my friends, myself included,
you get married very young.
Does your dad pick your husband?
So Adventism is not arranged marriage,
it's conversion therapy.
That's the one that Adventists are big on.
They're one of the first
and possibly the first religious organization
to fund conversion therapy.
To make gay folks straight.
Yeah, but conversion therapy goes also under the umbrella
of you're starting to de-convert and bringing you back.
So part of how I got out of the whole situation, if you're starting to deconvert and bringing you back.
So part of how I got out of the whole situation, I married another pastor's kid.
So essentially some of the timeline for myself
is that my mom passed away under mysterious circumstances
as the pastor's wife.
That started a deconversion process for me.
However, I married back into it.
So their family put in a lot of effort to try to get me back in.
So the person I married, there was some non-consensual stuff happening.
Social media was basically the shield.
At the time, I was telling people, if you don't see me post in 72 hours, call somebody.
2020 was a rough year.
Basically at the time he was saying things like,
I'm the only thing standing between you
and disappearing into conversion therapy.
Your husband.
Yeah.
A lot of people wouldn't look at Adventism
from the outside as being that intense.
However, from the back end of it,
my side of the family and the family I married into,
they're high up, at least in the Canadian side of Adventism.
I took it very seriously when I started getting that messaging from him because with what
happened with my mom and the way that my dad's employers reacted to that, it was creepy and
very much like, Oh no, I'm in an organization that has a lot of money and doesn't treat
women well.
What was your journey mentally?
At any point did you buy in fully?
When did it start cracking?
I was fully bought into this because I was born into it.
I was dedicated as a baby, baptized into it.
When you grow up in those organizations as a woman, you're very much the caregiver and eldest daughter, so you take care of the family. So I got
into some psychology program stuff because I wanted to be a counselor and
then I started to realize I can't be an effective counselor and an Adventist.
That started really clashing. I'm supposed to be converting people, but all
of what I'm learning about ethics says otherwise.
So when I started getting out of that,
I had a friend who works in the oil field,
because I'm out in Alberta.
He would be gone for a few months at a time.
And I was like, hey, could I just crash at your place
for a little bit?
At one point, I just didn't go back home,
because certain types of people in a relationship,
as they start losing control, they get weird.
They start doing things that are just
trying to get control back.
So I started posting all the time on TikTok and Insta,
basically being like, if I do disappear,
something happens to me along those lines,
because when my mom passed, no one asked questions.
And was your father largely emotionless about her passing?
Well, that was the weird thing about that is
I was at an Adventist university and it was my third year.
I got a call from him very early in the morning
where he was sobbing about how she had passed
and how she had, in his words, suffocated in her sleep.
Keeping in mind, she's about 43.
Also, you don't suffocate in your sleep on your own.
Accidentally.
Unless you're like a crazy drug user.
Well, that's what he was claiming,
is that her pain medication,
because she was in a lot of chronic pain.
However, your central nervous system,
and I talked to a few medical experts since,
they'll tell you that'll still roll you over.
So when I showed up, I'm fully expecting him to be a mess,
but for the week I was there, I flew home the same day.
When I walked in the door,
all of her journals had been collected
and he was hauling them out in a garbage bag.
Whoa.
Basically telling me that she had written
that he'd done this, that, and the other,
and he didn't want the police finding it as evidence.
That's weird, but at that point, I still trusted him.
And then for the week I was there before the funeral,
it was like deadpan,
nothing had happened, normal. And then as her family started showing up, siblings, that's when
the tears started. He can cry on cue. I've seen him do it for sermons. This is life on planet Earth
for people. It's so scary. This is scary. Yeah. And I will disclaimer, this was a few years back. I've
been through therapy, all that stuff.
I know it sounds very heavy.
You were born into this.
Yes, man.
No one picked this.
It's like you're playing the lottery when you come out of somebody.
Like what household are you going to land in?
And it could be insane.
Yeah.
I've thought about that before where I was like, why did I get the doomsday parents,
the conspiracy theory parents?
Lucky me.
But I eventually got my hands on her autopsy
report and what the autopsy said obviously did not align with what he said.
But of course, like immediately, as I say, accidental suffocation, you say that shouldn't
be a thing for a grown woman who is mobile, even on heavy pain meds.
The autopsy says something completely different. Nobody questioned anything,
not her siblings, not all the employers. And so at her funeral, her friends were not there.
It was all these guys from the SDA conference. I look around and it's just like men. It's
a handmaid's tale. It felt very dystopian. And then within a couple of months, my father
had moved on to dating somebody else,
had married them.
They're much younger.
I have a younger brother.
He called them us 2.0.
He basically got a more functioning family
for the pastor's commercial that they sell.
Then he was promoted to working in the capital of Canada
after that situation.
So as I'm trying to get out of my situation
where I'm experiencing not a safe relationship,
I've got him plus our dads,
plus the whole conference behind them.
And so I was like, oh dear,
this could turn out really terribly for me,
hence me going through social media and being like,
hey, I exist, anybody out there?
And started talking about it.
Wow, and so you stayed with your friend.
He was drilling oil.
Oh, right.
You got to have some alone time, unbrainwashed,
stop receiving the signals.
Yeah, after my mom passed,
I started to very gradually move away from the church
and it started to become a trigger point for me.
And during the time that I was married, I basically stopped attending and was really pulling away.
And then we were in the same city as his parents.
So we had a lot of things,
including his father attempted to make us do
marriage counseling with him.
He's a pastor. He's not qualified to do that.
It's also his dad, for Christ's sake.
It was a very controlling environment.
And we actually had somebody from the youth group
come into our home and then report back to the youth pastor about what was going on in the house.
According to them, I was an alcoholic because I had a bottle of wine that I used for cooking
pasta sauce. There's a lot that could be laid out, could probably keep you for hours.
How'd you get a divorce? That is actually still being processed.
I've been separated for a while,
but because of COVID, everything's backed up.
But they let you.
For the first little bit, it was tough,
but fortunately, because of social media,
they wanted to distance themselves from me
as fast as possible.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because I became the fallen woman.
According to them, I met one of his coworkers
and they claimed that he told them I hexed him with COVID.
They claim a lot of spiritual warfare stuff
where essentially I'm a witch.
But then you're dressing up like one.
You're kind of playing into their hand.
Lean in, you should lean in.
I bet that's your way of empowering yourself.
You should become a witch.
I like witches.
I absolutely played into it.
I think for a little bit I wrote that like good Christian girl to pagan pipeline.
Right.
But it definitely played into that shield because Adventism is all about image.
They want to look as professional as possible.
They want to look as put together, competent, smart.
Like it's all about selling you the lifestyle.
So Adventism didn't go the route of like child marriage or anything
like that, that would set you off.
They're trying to sell you almost in the same way an MLM would
sell you essential oils.
Oh, man.
Well, look, I guess I would hope for you that the gift you have now is that you
can talk to people who have gone through what you have now is that you can talk to people who have gone through
what you have gone through and you can comfort people and you have spidey
senses now and you are going to be intuitive and helpful.
Funny you should say that because I ended up building a whole life and
platform around that concept or essentially a community of deconstruction.
That also became like a big part of the social media side
is a whole bunch of other people are deconstructing
from this stuff at the same time.
Inside that organization,
they'll tell you that you need their community,
the world's out to get you.
If you go out there, your whole life is gonna fall apart
and it will feel like that for a bit.
It's going to feel awful.
You're gonna feel disoriented.
All alone in the world, the scariest feeling you can have. It's going to feel awful. You're gonna feel disoriented.
All alone in the world, the scariest feeling you can have.
It is, it's very scary.
And what I tell people is essentially,
if you're in that feeling of deconstructing,
you're questioning stuff,
you have to get past that time period
that they're counting on.
You're going to feel so awful that you come back
just for the comfort of what you know.
You have to get past that point
because there's a whole world of people waiting for you,
waiting to interact with you that are gonna love what you do
that are gonna wanna be part of your life.
You gotta get past the drop of exit.
Yeah.
If someone that's listening can relate to this
and wants to find you, how could they do that?
They can find me under Rosie Quartz just about anywhere
with Rosie, like the R-O-S They can find me under Rosie Quartz just about anywhere
with Rosie, like the R-O-S-E-I and then Quartz, yeah.
Quartz like Quartz Crystal?
Yes.
Okay, great.
Thank you for sharing that.
What a story.
Honestly, I just wanna say thank you
for the opportunity to talk about it
because whenever I can, I just try to put out there,
hey, there is this organization
that you might be vulnerable to because they intentionally target people who are struggling with health, physical or mental, and also lack of community.
So this is something to be on guard for and be careful of.
Well, thank you.
Oh boy.
That was insanely informative.
I wish you a ton of luck.
I hope a lot of people find you and can hear what you're saying
Thank you very much. Okay. Take care
I feel so lucky. Yeah, I do think many people walk around thinking I could never be me
Right would never and it's all circumstance everyone's way more like their parents
You know, you're just brought home to a house and then they tell you what reality is
and it is until some crazy intervention happens
to break that.
And most of the time it doesn't.
Well, this is heavy.
Heavy, but I'm really glad we did it.
Yeah, me too.
We hit it all.
Yeah, we really hit it all.
I love you, I'm so glad you're not in a cult.
Yeah.
I'm in one, so it's kind of tricky.
No. No, because'm in one, so it's kind of tricky. No.
No, because there's multiple definitions of it,
and one of it is high controlling.
That was all four of these, and yours is not.
So it doesn't qualify, it's not high controlling.
Yeah, there's also no-
We're talking about AA, by the way.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
There's no charismatic leader at the top either.
You can't elevate. Money.
There's no status to be gained.
Oh, all right.
Well, I love you.
Love you.
Do you want to sing a tune or something?
We don't have a theme song.
Oh, okay, great.
We don't have a theme song for this new show.
So here I go, go, go.
We're gonna ask some random questions
and with the help of our cherries we'll get
some suggestions On the fire rind-ish, on the fire rind-ish
Enjoy!