Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Armchair Anonymous: Cults II
Episode Date: May 9, 2025Dax and Monica talk to Armcherries! In today's episode, Armcherries tell us about a time they escaped a cult.Follow Armchair Expert on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Watch... new content on YouTube or listen to Armchair Expert early and ad-free by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts, or Spotify. Start your free trial by visiting wondery.com/links/armchair-expert-with-dax-shepard/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Welcome, welcome, welcome to Armchair Anonymous.
I'm Dan Shepard, I'm joined by Mon Padman.
Hi, you're trying it out.
It doesn't sound right on you.
Not when you do first and last name. Mon Padman.
That sounds like Mon-sour Padman, which is pretty cool.
Yeah, that is cool.
Maybe it is good. Mon-y Padman, that sounds crazy too.
These nicknames when they're in conjunction with your full name maybe don't work.
Okay, that's fine.
Yeah.
Like D.D. Shepard.
Ooh, D.D. Shepard. That sounds fun.
Today is part two of one of our favorite prompts ever,
escaping a cult.
This is tough, it's tough out there.
But you do- It is.
We learned a lot.
There's some real through lines with these cults.
Oh yeah, there's some consistencies.
Yeah, and it's good to know them.
Some patterns, and maybe if you've recognized
that one of these things is happening in your life.
And if you're a vegetarian, you're in a cult.
If you get invited to a vegetarian meal, you're dust.
No, but I will say, it made me think
there's a lot more than I'm aware of.
I just stupidly assume I'll see a doc about them
if they're real.
It makes me think you're bumping into people all the time
that probably were raised in some of these fringy religious traditions.
Oh, cults.
Oh, I am a pussyfooting around about it.
Please enjoy Cults Part 2.
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From tires auto repair, we're always there at treadexperts.ca. You know those creepy stories that give you goosebumps?
The ones that make you really question what's real?
Well what if I told you that some of the strangest, darkest, and most mysterious stories are not
found in haunted houses or abandoned forests, but instead in hospital rooms and doctor's
offices?
Hi, I'm Mr. Ballin, the host of Mr Bollin's Medical Mysteries, and each week on my podcast,
you can expect to hear stories about bizarre illnesses no one can explain, miraculous recoveries
that shouldn't have happened, and cases so baffling they stumped even the best doctors.
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show. Listen to Mr. Ballin's Medical Mysteries on the Wondry app or wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen early and ad-free right now by joining Wondry Plus in the Wondry app
or on Spotify or Apple podcasts. Hi, is this Taj?
Yes, it's so good to meet you guys.
Oh, wonderful to meet you.
You're my first Taj.
Is this a family name?
My real name is Amy.
Oh, okay.
I have a very common last name.
And about 10 years ago, I decided,
you know, there's too many in the world,
so I'm just going to pick a different name.
Oh, I love this. You rebranded.
My brother and I both have done this.
And did the people around you immediately accept it,
or did you have people that were still calling you Cassius Clay?
Well, I live in Portland, Oregon, where everybody changes their name.
Oh, that's a great place to change your name.
But my mom, who at the time was still living in New Jersey,
she has passed since then, she freaked out because she was a therapist
and the only person that she knew who had changed their name was a schizophrenic patient.
Oh, okay. So she thought that was a bad omen.
She thought that her kids were going to do over here.
You know, the topic I would love to briefly touch on with you, Dax, is improv.
Oh, yes, please.
So I used to be painfully shy.
And that comes out in the story because it happened just after college.
And improv has really changed my life.
It's not that I was ever interested in being in front of the camera,
but it's a mindfulness practice and also for helping you be a better human.
I just wondered if you had ever come across that approach to improv.
I want to hear about yours.
Someone taught you and it was taught with
the intention of the life practice more than a pursuit.
I actually came across that myself.
When I was living in Flagstaff,
my next door neighbor was a meditation teacher.
I was a lapsed meditator.
And you know that old Reese's commercial
where two people bump into each other,
one has peanut butter and one has chocolate?
Yes.
So it was like, you got meditation in my improv.
No, you got improv in my meditation.
So during the pandemic, we started teaching
mindful improv and meditation using improv games.
Okay. Now tell me why you think that's a good overlap.
Right out of the gates, I would go like presence is required.
Listening.
Yeah. And you have to let go of your idea because let's say,
you start a scene with somebody and you think you're in a barn and they say,
nurse hand me the scalpel, something like that.
And you have to just let go right away or else it's going to be like tug of war.
And just be present with what is and let go of ego.
And the less you try to be funny,
I know you guys know if you're trying to put in the crazy things, it doesn't work.
Yeah, there's a spirit of harmony and collaboration.
It doesn't work. Someone someone steamrolling. Okay,
I like that. All right. Alas, this episode though is about cults.
I hope it's on an improv cult. Well, but as we've already acknowledged, they are cults.
They can be cult-y. I wouldn't call them cults.
My experience was not with an improv cult. So this takes place in 94 when I was in my mid-20s.
I was vulnerable to this because
I had just gotten out of college a couple years before. I was just lost. I had been
really successful in the structure of college. I was so shy. I just had no idea how the
world worked. So, I was looking for something to latch onto.
So, one day I saw a sign at a bookstore saying they were having a meditation class. I went and it was in this little room above the bookstore,
and it turned out I was the only student.
It was me and this teacher.
We did the meditation for a bit and then he turned into my therapist for that day.
That was very attractive.
Someone would listen to me and he told me about his teacher who was going to be
giving this free vegetarian dinner at a fancy restaurant downtown Boston.
They always get you with the vegetarian dinner. We had somebody else on talking about this.
If someone offers you a vegetarian dinner, just-
You run.
Well, maybe not run, just you know.
No, you run.
He said his teacher was named Rama. To describe Rama a little bit, he's this tall guy with a
Jufro, as we say in my background, blondish hair, very awkward but also very,
very confident that pulls people in.
But not Indian because you said his name was.
Well, his chosen name was Rama.
I think I can share the real name
because it's all over the Internet.
The story has come out about him.
It was Dr. Frederick Lenz.
I don't know if you guys have ever heard of him.
No, but a doctor.
He had a PhD in literature and then he chose from then on
to call himself doctor, which is already a little shady.
Sure.
So he's going by this other name, he's not Indian.
I thought Indian when I heard the name.
Me too, I thought it too.
And I thought meditation, but no.
He believed he was a reincarnation of St. Thomas More
and Indian teachers and all kinds of people.
It's never like I'm a reincarnation of a field worker.
Right.
I went and he gave a little talk.
He was very into Carlos Castaneda
and he wanted us to read those books.
How many folks were at this initial free vegetarian dinner?
I'd say a hundred.
Oh, okay.
There's some critical mass.
If you show up somewhere to see a spiritual guide
and there's three people, you're like,
well, this guy's bunk.
A hundred, you're like, okay. It can's bunk. 100, you're like, okay.
It can't be that crazy if all these people are here.
That's right. If you are starting a cult, stock it with some extras.
You have to pay some extras.
Even if you don't have that many followers, maybe get some hourly folks to build out the
audience.
The thing that grabbed me was we meditated with him and he was sitting on a little stage
in front of everyone and he asked us to keep our eyes open and look at him while we were meditating.
When we started meditating with him,
I started almost immediately seeing light coming out of him
and his face started morphing into an old man
and then a child and then a woman,
and I would close my eyes and try and clear my vision,
and it just kept happening,
and I thought, wow, there's something going on.
That's quite a thing to observe.
Are you not terrified?
It was subtle, almost like you're having a dream.
Or if you're on shrooms or something. Exactly.
That's what I was about to say.
Oh no.
Oh no.
Well, hold on.
But you know, I could clear it.
If I blinked my eyes, he was normal again.
So I thought, you know, this is part of channeling other entities.
It's not like he's actually changing into someone else.
So it wasn't terrifying.
It was more intriguing to me.
The senior student of his that had invited me to
that dinner said that there was going to be
this 10-day meditation retreat coming up.
And it sort of felt like it was an audition to be part of the cult in a way.
They wanted people to have headshots and full body,
especially women, to have pictures to submit as part of the application,
which you have to wonder what those are for.
Sure.
But I decided to go against better judgment,
and we went to this summer camp that they had rented for the 10 days.
A lot of the time, he wasn't there.
It was his senior students leading meditation sessions and
talking about Zen Master Rama,
that's the full name he went by.
They said that they had seen him levitate
and teleport and projecting light from his hands. And apparently if anyone criticized
him, if he had any enemies, he could cause them to get cancer or be in a major car accident.
Oh, okay.
So he had a dark side.
Yes, very much. He also claimed to control the weather and pass through alternate dimensions
and create
and destroy universes. And I was just starting to get very skeptical at this point. We're
on day three, four, and I'm like, I think I need to get out of here.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And it did not feel like a place where you could just say, okay, bye, I'm not into this.
They were kind of, you are staying for the 10 days you committed to this no matter what.
So he had shown up for one
evening and he's talking about Kundalini. The image is this snake that's curled up at
the base of each person's spine. And when you raise the Kundalini energy, that snake
is supposed to come up. So that night I had a dream that the Kundalini snake was not inside
me but was wrapping around me and trying to just kill me. And I woke up with terrible cramps.
And I decided to kind of embellish the cramps into, I think, that my appendix. I had to
get to a hospital. So I finally got them to call an ambulance, get me out of there, from
which I called my family and just went away from this whole thing.
But I forgot to mention, he always would talk about his dog, Vayu.
And apparently he believed that he was one of 12 enlightened beings on the planet and
Vayu was another one of the 12.
Okay, so two of the 12 were accounted for between he and Vayu.
Yeah.
And he believed that Vayu was the reincarnation of his spiritual teacher.
I'm glad he didn't try to heal you.
Well, I'm sure that was coming.
No, I mean like with the appendicitis.
Oh, all right.
Well, he was not actually present.
He had just come in for a talk and jetted off.
He had all these mansions and lots of cars.
He had a whole collection of Porsches and Mercedes and Range Rovers,
and his senior students got together for his birthday and bought him a Porsche.
They claimed to have memory of technology from Atlantis.
Oh, okay.
And Zen Master Rama said his form of Buddhism was what he called materialistic Buddhism.
That's the kind we need to practice.
Where it's okay to make a pile of money because that is a reflection of your spiritual progress. Once you left, did you keep following
this person and what was happening?
A number of years later, I read an article about how he died.
But I did want to mention one thing I did see personally,
which was that evening that he showed up,
somebody had asked him if he would be able to drink
a whole bottle of hot sauce without any physical manifestation.
You know how you would turn red and you would be in pain.
So he did that, no big deal.
So the guy had something, but I wouldn't say it was for the good of all.
Yeah.
But his death really nailed that this was not a sane person because
his dog had passed away and apparently Zen Master Rama could not handle
being in the world without this dog.
His master.
So he committed suicide wearing a Versace suit and the dog's collar and tags.
He was found in the water by one of his mansions and he had over 150
valium in his system and he made a suicide pact with one of his followers
who happened to be a formal model.
He had sort of a harem going.
Yes.
Yep.
They're going to have a harem.
They're going to have some nice cars.
Oh, it's so classic.
So do we think he did drug you guys?
I think it's hypnosis.
Cause you hadn't eaten the vegetarian meal prior to seeing all that or had you?
We had actually.
So there's always that possibility, but there were other times where I hadn't
eaten something
and was sitting in some of the students' presence
and felt some interesting stuff.
Wow, wild.
Wow.
Did you know anyone that stuck with that?
No, I just got out of it and stayed away.
There's a quote from a documentary I saw
about people who win the Powerball
that I think really fits with this kind of person.
In the quote, it's about winning the lottery,
but I think it's if you attain a lot of money and a lot of power,
it's like pouring miracle crow on your character flaws.
Ooh.
Yeah.
That's good.
Yeah.
That's really good.
Those lottery documentaries fascinate the hell out of me.
I've seen a couple.
Talk about, be careful what you wish for.
There's almost no good stories in those.
In the one that I saw years ago, it's called lucky.
There are some good stories and some negatives.
Yeah, it can't all be bad.
No, I shouldn't say that.
There's just an incredibly high rate of people filing for bankruptcy.
There's a lot of stress with their family.
Yeah, a lot of suicide.
It upticks a lot of things.
I also have a joke for you guys.
If you want a really bad taste joke about cults.
Oh yeah. Yeah. a really bad taste joke about cults. Oh yeah, yeah.
We love bad taste jokes.
Why aren't there very many popular jokes about Jonestown?
I think it must have to do with Kool-Aid, but I don't know.
What is it?
The punch lines are too long.
Uh.
I don't get it.
The standing line for the punch.
Oh, oh.
Very literal.
Terrible.
It's a pun. That's good. Well, oh! They're very literal. Terrible.
It's a pun.
That's good.
Well, Taj, this has been a delight meeting you
and hearing your story.
I love you guys, thank you.
Thank you.
Bye.
All right, take care.
Bye-bye.
As someone who saw Grandlady hands, Grandma hands,
that's what she saw.
Yeah, on shrooms,
and you just stare at any given thing long enough, you'll just see some. Yeah. That's what she saw. Yeah, on shrooms and you stare at any given thing
long enough, you'll just see some.
Yeah, things morph.
Yeah, I think they definitely chalk that vegetarian meal.
And to their credit, mushrooms are vegetarian.
Maybe that's why,
because they can technically get away with it.
It's technically legal.
It's technically legal.
Mushroom dinner.
Mushroom medley.
Hi, how are you? Good, how are you? Good, is this a beautiful photo of you Technically legal. It's technically legal. Mushroom dinner. Mushroom medley.
Hi, how are you?
Good, how are you?
Good, is this a beautiful photo of you and your lover
engaged in play on the beach?
Engagement photos.
Oh, that's cute.
It looks like you're either doing hacky sack
or you could be doing the kid and play dance.
I think I was kicking water at him.
Okay, cause you're playful and you taunted him.
17 years ago. You don't look nearly old enough to be engaged 17 years ago.
I'm 38 now. I was 20.
Were you high school sweethearts?
No, we met, well, this kind of comes into play.
I grew up in a cult.
Oh.
So I did not know him in high school.
Okay.
Kristin, where are you from?
I'm from Northern California.
You know, Humboldt County. I think you've talked about it actually.
Golden Triangle or Green Triangle.
Up where all the good weed and meth are.
Yes.
I was almost born into it.
My mom got married and I was in the religion from the time I was really tiny.
So it wasn't something where I joined, it was something where I was there as a child.
And are you allowed to say the name of what the religion was?
It was called Gospel Outreach. It's still around today. It's one you wouldn't have heard of. It's
a lot smaller. And they're pretty good at keeping themselves on the down low and not being too
obvious about what's going on there. Their religious beliefs would be evangelical, Lutheran
type of thing. They believe that you are born full of sin. And every day, your
old man, as they call it, needs to be killed so that your new man can come forth in Christ.
So the way they do this is they try to break you by just beating down on you. You have
meetings as children. We would have circle meetings where you'd pick a person and you
just verbally attack them until they finally get to their breaking point. And they would do weird things like make us wear signs
about our shortcomings and wear those around school.
Oh my God.
Okay, really quick.
So this has huge overlap with this doc I saw
about synonym, which was this offshoot of sobriety
a guy invented in Venice.
And he had this thing called the game and it's how the
group therapy worked and you attacked each other. And then all these people wanted to
be a part of that organization that weren't drug addicts and then all these civilians
joined up in the Bay Area. I just wonder if there's any bleed out of this. Do you know
the history of this religion?
I don't know a whole lot. I know originally it started, the church that I went to was
kind of in the Jesus movement and it was taking hippies and helping them function in the world
type of a thing. But then that church got associated with a church up in Olympia, Washington.
And that's what I call the mother church where a lot of the very culty things came from in
the way we lived life. So I think
it's more from up there is where it all started. It's pretty small. It's not very connected
with other things. There's a few churches in Oregon, Washington, and then the one in
Northern California. So there's really not many. There's maybe five total that are really
involved.
And then the church has its own at school where we're all educated.
Whoops. We were taught by parents originally. None of them really had degrees or educations.
They weren't teachers. Some of the classes we were self-taught.
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At 24, I lost my narrative, or rather it was stolen from me.
And the Monica Lewinsky that my friends and family knew
was usurped by
false narratives, callous jokes, and politics.
I would define reclaiming as to take back what was yours.
Something you possess is lost or stolen, and ultimately you triumph in finding it again.
So I think listeners can expect me to be chatting with folks, both recognizable and unrecognizable names,
about the way that people have navigated roads to triumph.
My hope is that people will finish an episode of Reclaiming
and feel like they filled their tank up.
They connected with the people that I'm talking to
and leave with maybe some nuggets
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How many parishioners were at the church and then how many kids were you in school with?
It's grown.
So they always say that their church growth plan is be fruitful and multiply.
They almost never let people come in from the outside, but they just have lots of kids.
And then they kind of intermarry. And eventually that's going to get interesting. They send
women to the other churches so that they kind of have more of a pool to choose from.
I was a student teacher at a very young time there in the school. And then when I was 15,
they said, okay, time to be done. Go take your California high school proficiency examination.
So I went and took it and I failed. And then I took it a while later once they offered
it again after some studying and I passed. I was 16 then. And then at that point, I just
taught full time in the school. I was never paid. It was all free. I didn't have any really
education to speak of, but I was one of the teachers, which was never paid. It was all free. I didn't have any really education
to speak of. But I was one of the teachers, which was somewhat of an esteemed position.
You wanted to be a teacher. As a woman in that environment, your job is to be a wife
and a mother. There's nothing else for you. You shouldn't pursue a career. No one should
go to college. College is considered to almost be evil.
Getting married is a really huge thing. You have to be recommended
for marriage. You have to attain a certain level of status. And the last thing you would want is to
be old and alone. The marriages were somewhat arranged. You could express interest in a person
as a man if you wanted to. The men who leave the church might say no, they might say yes, they
might say, look at someone else. You also might just go to the men and say, who should I marry? And they would tell you who you should marry.
As a woman, you do have the right to say no to a marriage offer, but it will probably
be your last offer.
Oh my God, this is wild.
And is there any visible impropriety? There's no multiple marriages happening.
No plural marriage. It's all one-on-one and it's all of age. So they're winning there. Yes. Yes. Kudos. They're keeping it legal. They look really good from the outside and they do
well at that. People are always very impressed. How do I get to be a part of this? This is so
amazing. You guys are doing such good things. Your kids are so well-behaved.
How many boys your age were in your school? So my school, the one in Eureka, California,
was very small. So at the time I was there, it was only maybe 40 kids in the school. So my school, the one in Eureka, California, was very small. So at the time I was there,
it was only maybe 40 kids in the school. So in my age group, I had five boys, very few
options unless I was to be sent to another church.
And did you have a crush on any of them?
It's a really, really simple thing to admit that you would have a crush on somebody. So
you really have to kind of suppress that part of yourself. Be very careful not to be seen interacting
too heavily with boys.
You don't ever touch in any kind of a way or sit too close.
If they think you might like somebody,
it's not gonna work out well for you generally.
You need to leave that to the church.
And how much natural questioning did you have?
I was pretty bought in.
This is my life.
This is everything I know.
I've got to do the right thing. Leaving the church is the ultimate worst thing you could do. And so it was really scary. I was
kind of doing what they wanted me to do. The other thing that's interesting about the school day is
we did school as in math language till noon. And then from noon on, we did only music. We recorded
and produced CDs. I think Wabiwab has some pictures.
Oh, wow.
Seventeen and the picture of me and that boy.
For the listener, you're on stage.
It's a good sized stage.
We've got a lot of huge pictures of biblical paintings
behind you being put on a projector.
Now that I see the stage,
I'm assuming the music portion is like
the attractive part of the religion. Like if you
were to observe this, you'd be like, oh yeah, they're having so much fun. They're not trying
to recruit, which I find interesting. Recruiting can get dicey because people aren't usually
willing to give everything if they didn't grow up in that environment. There's going to be some
inherent skepticism. It'd be tough and then people would question things. Were you guys inviting non church members to witness the music?
We would go perform in front of large audiences. We would do like Christmas performances. The
CD that I sent the song and the pictures, we did box fourth cantata. We did very intricate,
difficult music and got pretty good because it's literally everything
we do.
It's pretty insane and comical to me to listen to because it's a whole different person.
So how I left, I wasn't the highest status, but I was doing all right. But I was very
bought in. And then one day, my dad sat my whole family down in the living room. There's
seven of us kids and I'm the oldest. And I was 19 at the time and he said, we're
leaving the church. Total shock to us. We all just started sobbing. We were devastated.
It's our whole life. We don't even know people outside the church. So it's like the worst
thing that could happen to us.
And I remember he said we could stay for like another month until some performance happened
with music. So we had to go back to school and my friends were crying in the grocery store, crying till they throw up. It's the
worst thing that could happen.
We went through the last little bit and we left. But the day that he told me we were
leaving, I called someone who was like a mentor, a woman who was higher up as far as women
can be. And she said to me, how much do you love the church? Do you love the church enough to leave your family? And I remember that I thought, yes. And I said,
maybe, I don't know. The next day, she took back her offer and said, I talked to my husband
and he said, I need to stay out of it. Because she had mentioned maybe me coming and living
with them. And she was like, never mind. You stay with your family. And I was devastated by that. And I
found out later that my dad had gone and threatened the men of the church and said, don't fuck with
my family. Okay. Don't try to come after my kids. When your dad told you, you were all leaving,
did he give an explanation as to why? I don't remember a lot of that day, but I know that he
had gone to the men of the church and said, I don't believe that we're doing things biblically here. I think there's some real
issues and we should make some changes. And they said, we don't care. You need to either do what
we're doing or get out. And then when we left the church, to me, it felt a lot like if you've moved
to a different country that was English speaking. Like, yeah, we speak the same language, but I
don't really get your humor, your culture.
I don't really understand what you're saying. I was really shocked by boys just being even
mildly flirtatious. It was very alarming.
You were clutching your pearls a lot.
Exactly. Oh my gosh. It was really scary and lonely. It was so hard. But I met friends
and gradually have become the person I am now. It was a very long evolution
because there's a lot of boundaries in your head that you might not even realize you have.
Like the pursuing a career, I really didn't feel like I could pursue a career.
And I remember one day early in my husband and I's marriage, I said something about one day,
it'd be cool to go to nursing school. And he said, you should do it. And I was so shocked by his response because I was like,
wait, I could do it. It just didn't seem possible to me.
I did eventually go to college. I was 30 when I took my first ever college class.
I had nervous shits in between every class.
It was so scary. But I have a bachelor's degree and I'm an ER nurse.
Wow! But I have a bachelor's degree and I'm an ER nurse.
It's so cool to look back.
And it's a big part because I had people in my life who just supported me and wanted me to be a full person.
And my husband was a huge part of that.
Any foreign objects.
What's the term?
Rectal.
Rectal foreign objects.
There's a cucumber, Gatorade bottle.
A kid with a bottle. Oh, Gatorade. Oh my God. A mole.
A kid with a lipstick.
Oh no.
Did you watch the pit?
Yes, I watched the pit.
Hands down, the most accurate medical show I've ever seen.
There we go.
The one thing they never get right is nurses are so underrepresented.
We're doing everything.
The docs put in the orders, we do it.
Wow.
Really quick, did dad find his way
to another fringy religion?
He is a pastor and he has a small church.
And what about your siblings?
Did they transition well into the worldly world?
We've all kind of had a hard time in different ways.
They're all doing good, but it's been a struggle.
Mentally, it's a lot to get through.
Locally, some of them were a lot younger.
I was the oldest.
So some of them had much shorter periods of time
that they lived in the religion and they were mostly outside.
So that helps a ton.
Does it diminish your confidence
in your ability to evaluate reality?
To some degree, there's things,
I have expectations of people,
how they're gonna treat me, how they're gonna act.
And I think that's been most poignant in my marriage
where he'll say something pretty benign
and I'm like, why are you trying to attack me?
Why are you coming after me?
But I just expect that.
So we've had to definitely work through some things.
To me, there is nothing more impressive
than shedding an old life and starting fresh.
Thank you.
Yeah, do you like Megan Phelps-Roper?
Have you heard her talk at all?
I don't think so.
She was in Westboro Baptist, that wild Baptist church
that holds the terrible signs up at funerals.
Yes, you wrote a book.
She did leave her family.
I'm just in awe of people who can do that.
Me too.
It's very hard.
Well, can my husband come say hi?
Yes. Yes, of course.
Hi, handsome husband.
Oh, there's a cat in the mix.
My daughter talked me into one and then now we have four.
Oh.
Kind of got duped on that deal.
Yeah, I think that's what happens with one cat.
They're like mogwai. All of a sudden you have five.
It's like they got wet.
Yeah, they work their way in there.
I'm glad you guys got to meet my wife.
She's a huge fan.
She's definitely a full package.
So go to work and save a couple of lives.
Come home, paint the house, sing the kids to bed.
Yeah.
It's good to get someone that really was like brainwashed and had to do a lot of
stuff because then just doing normal stuff feels like nothing.
That's like a hack.
I had a pretty good inside track on it
because I worked with a lot of people
she went to church with for about 11 years.
So I was probably as close as you can get
to the inside circle without being on the inside.
You were well versed.
That's helpful.
Well, it's so nice meeting both of you guys.
Yes, thanks for sharing. Nice to meet you. All right well versed. That's helpful. Well, it's so nice to meet you both of you guys. Thanks for sharing. All right, take care. Hello. Is this Anna?
It is. Hi Anna. Nice to meet you. I love your floral wallpaper. Thank you. I'm in a
B&B. In what state are you visiting? I am in Toulouse, France. I live in Portland,
Oregon, but I'm visiting a friend who is getting married
who lives in Toulouse.
She is the one who recommended this prompt to me.
And we were at a cult together.
Oh. Together.
That's how you met.
Well, we were children,
but it feels very full circle to me.
I just arrived today to see her.
Oh, how lovely.
This may or may not shock you,
but of the three people we've spoken with,
two are from Portland.
Oh, interesting. Yeah, I feel like Colts are kind of a West Coast deal.
I do too.
A lot of them are.
Yeah, Northern Cali had, and then now two Portlands.
Well, because wasn't the Rajneeshees,
that was Oregon too.
That was Eastern Oregon, yeah.
The OG.
Ooh.
The OG.
The original guru.
No, Oregon.
Oh, okay, that too.
Okay, Anna, please tell us your experience. To be fair to Portland, Oregon. Oh, okay. That too. Okay, Anna, please tell us your experience.
To be fair to Portland, Oregon, I was in California.
We'll take it.
We were all up and down the coast, my group that I grew up in.
I don't know if you've ever heard of a group called the Assembly, also called the Giftakis
Assembly.
No.
Not Assembly of God.
Thinking Assembly of God, that's a different group.
No, I've never heard this, but I like the name it already is ominous.
Yes, so the assembly doesn't exist anymore,
but it was a Christian cult basically,
a Protestant church that started in the seventies
where the leader just wanted to go back to basics,
be really minimal.
People didn't wear makeup, it didn't dress up too much.
People kind of lived communally.
I think it was kind of nice in the beginning.
Everyone just sort of participated, you know,
sang acapella and it was just like, forget all of that worldly stuff. It had a hey nice in the beginning. Everyone sort of participated, you know, sang a cappella
and it was just like, forget all of that worldly stuff.
It had a heyday in the seventies.
It started in Southern California, but it was all over.
There are branches in Canada, Mexico, England,
a lot of places in South America.
And did it have a founding charismatic leader?
Georgia and Betty Giptakis are guiding light.
They were divinely inspired as far as we were concerned.
We talk about cult, at first you think it's gonna be like fun and sensationalist and wild,
but it's actually just sad and you know a lot of stories are really grim and a lot of them are about abuse.
But I wanted something that had a little more sparkle to it.
Okay.
Hahaha.
Okay.
Grrrrr.
So my story is about a pseudo-scientific medical device that my family used that kind of caught on in our very insular group.
It's called the Zapper. And the Zapper was supposed to heal you
by giving you a very light, sustained electric shock.
Okay.
And I'm wondering, Claire,
this wasn't preached from the pulpit,
like the Zapper will heal you,
but it was a kind of insular environment
where we didn't have any other friends
and just weird fads would take place.
And if someone of influence brought in a certain fad,
one time it was a planner.
Well, like a Franklin planner.
It's almost like an MLM.
That's funny because we actually did a lot of MLMs together and just sort of marketed
to each other basically.
So, to set the scene, because I sometimes go down a dark rabbit hole trying to explain the assembly, I made a kind of list of our fears and loves, which I'm going to share
with you.
Right.
Yeah.
The assembly is a person.
The assembly loves abstinence.
All day, all night meetings, chores, which are also called
stewardship, communal living, door-to-door witnessing, fellowships, which are like really
lame parties, our leader, George Katakis, homeschooling, the left behind franchise,
modesty, multilevel marketing, street preaching, spankings, tithing, and of course the zapper
Z.
If you have a Z and you have an alphabetical list, you got to put it in there.
So these are our fears, abortion, bikinis, evolution, government, homosexuality.
When you'd go to church or you'd see the service, how tied to Christianity was it?
Was the Bible still being primarily used or had he deviated so much that a lot of what
you were learning had nothing to do with the Bible?
In a way, we were trying to be so strict and like, hew so closely to scripture.
We thought all the other churches were kind of too diluted,
but you know the verse about straining a gnat
and swallowing a camel?
No.
There's a verse that's about foolish people
who would strain a gnat and swallow a camel,
meaning focusing on the real detail
and then swallowing something enormous
without even considering it.
Maybe that reference is not the right audience.
Yeah. No, it makes sense. something enormous without even considering it. Maybe that reference is not the right audience.
No, it makes sense. It got so granular that the bigger picture was crazy. Yeah. The thing that made it a high control group was that we believe that our leader and
people closely associated with him were receiving divine inspiration. If someone suggested something
to you, like you just sort of did it. It wasn't a suggestion. It was, this is my way of being closer
to God. Right.
So what was novel about the Mormons is that the parishioners could receive revelation.
That was the appealing part as I understand it. But in this sect, they could at least
receive revelations.
Yes. My family left when I was probably like 13. I wish I had like the Adulterer eye, but
my memories are mostly just being incredibly bored. When I look back on it, it feels as though a lot of the revelations
were kind of ad hoc and they're kind of convenient.
Well, it's like Joseph Smith's revelations
that a man should have multiple wives
once he was busted having sex with a young woman
that lived next door.
That's interesting timing of that revelation.
Yeah, I don't know if I would call it a revelation,
but by the time that I was conscious and participating,
one of our big things was we didn't do mainstream music.
We didn't watch film and television.
We didn't even sing in harmony.
What?
They were worried there's a lot of pop Christian music at the time,
and people would get caught up in the music and the emotion and lose the message.
Oh.
That way, we're focused on the message.
But yeah, let's see.
Our fears, government, homosexuality,
Eastern mysticism, we're like, no fears, government, homosexuality, Eastern mysticism,
we're like, no can do, feminism, no.
Public schools and their agendas, mainstream music, makeup.
We were so scared of Satan worshipers,
we never met any, we were talking about them all the time.
Secular holidays we didn't participate in.
Great, and really quickly, on the Zapper,
I'm guessing it was a pre-existing product
that this was an off-label use for,
or did someone invent this thing within the church?
The person who claimed to have invented it
was like a quack doctor who wasn't part of our church.
Her name was Holda Clark.
She's also the author of a quack book
called The Cure for All Diseases.
She was investigated for like medical malpractice,
I later learned, and moved to Mexico
because they were gonna close down
her wellness center in California.
Her whole thing was, well, all diseases, including cancer and AIDS are caused
by a parasite in the body.
So if you just need to electrocute the parasite and then you'll be all better.
So simple.
It's crazy.
None of these doctors thought of this.
Well, they just want to keep you sick.
Oh, sure.
If you commit to like life in the assembly, you're asked to push away your friends.
You're going to meetings every day. This group of people down in Fullerton,
they're just always sick and no doctors could tell them what was wrong with them.
They were fatigued. Sometimes it was headaches. Sometimes it was stomach ache.
They wouldn't have any energy. They just weren't well.
George and Betty would give them a special diet they would follow and that wouldn't work.
We started to call it Fullerton disease. When I hear this as an adult,
I think Fullerton disease is probably depression.
When you're a kid in the assembly, it sucked, right? Because you're in meetings all day,
like you're getting spankings all the time. Somebody rules, you don't celebrate Christmas,
you're just like, this sucks. But the best thing in the world was to be sick or someone
in your family is sick. Everyone's looking after you. You don't have to participate.
Oh God, this is like producing munch houses. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's the late 90s.
The apocalypse is kind of around the corner.
We're big into Y2K.
We needed like our best soldiers on the ground,
but people are coming down with Fullerton disease.
So enter this amazing device
that's going to solve what the doctors and diet can't.
Suddenly we're all zapping around the late 90s.
Imagine a black plastic box,
maybe around the size of your face or smaller,
with a little light on the top.
Inside it's got batteries and wires and stuff, and it's got an on-off switch. Wires are coming out
of it. The wires kind of lead to these two copper handles, and you're meant to hold onto the handles
and just turn on the thing and get an electric shock. It'll work up to 20 minutes. If it wasn't
working, you could get a paper towel wet and put that over and get like a little more of a shock.
Oh, Jesus. Okay.
Okay. You could juice it up a little bit.
Exactly.
and get like a little more of a shot. Oh, okay, you could juice it up a little bit.
Exactly.
I'm thinking of basically the lie detector device
that's been rebranded within Scientology
where you hold the handles and you get an E meter.
You did it?
Yeah, I did it at the Celebrity Center.
You went to the Celebrity Center?
You don't know this story?
No.
I don't know the story either.
What?
How could we have done all this Scientology? Wait, you should be a caller.
I wasn't joining.
We had had an improv show at UCB,
which is across the street.
Across the street.
Sorry to commandeer this.
Yeah, but this needs immediate attention.
I'm fascinated.
The Scientology Center had the recruitment day
and it was exciting and they had a fair
and we were like, we're gonna go.
As a bit.
As a bit, but also what are they gonna say?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
What is this like?
Reconnaissance.
Yeah, we all went to this movie theater
and there was a woman there who was in charge of us.
She was very odd, I would say.
And then we watched this crazy movie about Scientology.
It's not produced considering the people
who are involved in Scientology.
They have a TV station too.
They're gonna have Tom act in the movie at the very least. Famous writers have been involved. psychology. They have a TV station too. They're gonna have Tom act in the movie at the very least.
Famous writers have been involved.
Exactly, then they separated us all
and then we had to do the thing with the hands
and then they told us our levels.
They asked you some questions.
They asked questions and it is how much you're holding,
how much you're not, it's very primitive psychology
for like a lie detector test.
Yeah, it's a polygraph.
Yeah, but even way more basic than that. Anyway. Wow, okay, so it sounds like a lie detector test. Yeah, it's a polygraph. Yeah, but even way more basic than that.
Anyway.
Wow, okay, so sounds like a similar setup.
Our thing did even less than what you're describing.
It didn't even like produce any kind of results or anything.
Well, this didn't either.
They tell you a result.
So you were doing the zapper 20 minutes a day?
Yeah, we were zapping a lot.
You know, if you felt like you were coming down
with something, you might zap,
or just kind of proactively, you could zap.
In my head, I associated it with like a punishment.
I remember my parents being like, go zap.
Your parasite was acting up.
Yeah, I would think it was like the parasites are out of control. My mom, she likes to be
active. She can't just sit and hold something for 20 minutes. That's torture to her. She
was the same stress, so she wouldn't be like working at her sewing table. I remember this.
My mom used to take the copper rods and just like put them down the back of her pants. Oh, they need to make skin contact,
but it didn't matter what kind of skin. My dad notices this. He's an engineer. He's got
his own shop where he works with some industrial tools. So he goes away and like makes his
own modification where instead of the two round handles,
which are kind of uncomfortable to put down the back,
or fans, he makes these two curved,
butt cheeks shaped sort of things.
Like big spoons.
Yeah, exactly.
Then you could just put them down.
Oh wow.
This is madness.
This is how he's spending his time.
Someone knocks on the door and walks into this scene.
OEM, this is an original manufacturing.
This is a hybrid.
To do what?
To kill the parasite.
Obviously.
The weirdest bit is now if someone else
in the family's using it,
you know it's like been down my mom's like.
Ew, yeah.
Oh sure, sure.
You've got it on your cheeks or something.
I forgot about that.
They've been on mom's bottom cheeks.
At 13, how do we get out of this?
My mom decided she was going to leave.
She's not like gonna leave the group.
She's gonna leave my dad.
She's leaving everything. She got to like gonna leave the group. She's gonna leave my dad.
She's leaving everything.
She got like another apartment.
She bought a car and disappeared away to this other life.
Just to get out.
When you live in this kind of environment,
you don't know who you are or what your favorite color is.
You can't have a conversation.
You just crack.
Did she stay in the same town as you?
So we lived in San Luis Obispo
and she went to a Tascadero.
I know a Tascadero very well.
Is it close?
It's the same county, so she didn't go very far.
Oh my gosh, she was also probably in perimenopause
and her hormones.
Oh, you think this is on all fours?
It's a little bit all fours book.
She leaves and then after about a year,
my dad decides to officially remove the family from the group
because he was just kind of seeing them
for who they really were.
Yeah, ruined his family.
Yeah, how was the celibate command working out?
Is there celibacy within the marriage?
Oh, not within the marriage.
Sex is only okay in this really specific context.
Okay, right.
But there was this idea of no sex outside of marriage.
You weren't supposed to have crushes.
You didn't really date.
You weren't really supposed to, like, have desire.
You were just obeying God's command.
Oh, this is wild.
There's so many. There's a lot of these.
There are, there's so many of these.
You're not thinking when you're driving
through St. Louis, Abyssal, that's the home of Cal Poly.
And that these engineers are involved.
I know that's a stereotype, but I guess I imagine
how could an engineer get trapped into this?
It's the straining a netats while in a camel thing.
You get so focused on engineering the zapper that you're not thinking about,
why am I doing this?
Yeah.
Do we really think George in Fullerton has all the answers?
And he never got busted having multiple lovers?
Most of these founders.
He definitely did have multiple liaisons.
I lived a lot of allegations against him.
To be honest, why else deal with all the obligations of having cult followers
if you're not having sex with them?
Like what is the reward?
Power.
What's the point of power if not sex with hot people?
For you, but for a lot of people.
I mean, that's what power is about really.
It wasn't totally monetarily driven, but the tithing, you give a percentage,
sometimes like 10% of your earnings to the church.
That's all going to George in Washington.
Quickly to tie this bow on it, your friend's wedding.
So she was a member of the church and she presumably left as well.
Yeah.
Her family left a little bit earlier under the guise of, oh, we have to move away.
Task at arrow.
To Morro Bay.
A little further.
Exactly.
I'm going to see her get married on Saturday.
I'm gonna see a lot of old family friends
from the assembly days.
Wow.
Oh, that'll be such an interesting reunion.
Yeah, what a group to get together with.
Well, Anna, nice meeting you.
Thanks for telling us that story.
Thank you so much.
Have a great trip.
Bye.
Hi.
Is this Francesca?
This is me.
I'm so nervous.
Oh, don't be nervous.
You have a very cute sweater on. And do you go buy something shorter this Francesca? This is me. I'm so nervous. Oh, don't be nervous. You have a very cute sweater on.
And do you go by something shorter than Francesca?
Cause I can go all the way with Francesca,
but do you have like a nickname?
People call me Fran or my dad calls me Frankie.
Oh, I love that.
That's so cute.
Thanks.
I used to hate it, but I like it now.
Yeah.
What age do you think you get to
when you finally start liking all this cute stuff
your parents did?
When you feel like they might die.
Oh, you gotta wait that long.
Once they've died.
Yeah, once or they're getting close.
Then you love it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh, did you make a fort for us?
I did and I've really found my center in here
because I was really nervous
and it feels good just to sit here in the slight dark.
Cozy.
Do you do any breathing exercises or anything?
I tried, but they aren't working.
Okay, where are you?
Are you in Portland, Oregon?
No, I'm in Big Sky, Montana.
Oh. Okay.
Okay, so you've got a cult story, Francesca.
Fran, Frankie.
I sure do.
What if I said Frankie and she just started bawling?
Yeah, is she sure?
Yeah, it's too dangerous. But I want you to be. Okay, good. Frankie sure do what if I said Frankie and she just started bawling
You just need to ask and then I'll officially
If you're wondering who joined the cult it was these people
They're so cute. They look like they're on either a Seals and Croft or a Art Garfunkel and Paul Simon album cover.
I feel like they're in Italy.
Oh, are they in Italy in that photo?
I don't think so.
I'm guessing they're in Texas.
Okay.
Have you watched The Pit?
The Alamo.
I haven't seen The Pit.
Okay, so those gorgeous young people,
they found their way into something.
What was it?
They met these two people.
Their names were Trina and Steven.
They met them at a re-birthing seminar.
I don't know if you guys have ever heard of that.
I don't really know what it is either.
It's just where you practice re-doing your birth.
It was the early eighties.
Wait, you're re-enacting your own birth?
So that if you had any trauma coming in,
you can get rid of it.
They joined Trina and Steven because Trina believed
she could trans a spirit through her body.
A dead trans medium is what she was called.
So she would leave her body
and then the spirit would take over.
And that's what I did on Sundays,
pretty much from when I was born until I was 18.
Oh my God.
You'd go see Trina Channel Spirits.
So they collected a bunch of people.
It was called the Collective.
Was an actual collective,
so they all shared money and everything.
But by the time I was born,
it was not so much a collective.
Everyone had their own money.
And this was in Texas?
It was in Arizona.
We went to trance every Sunday. It was like a dimly lit room. Everyone
entered and we would sing, which was my favorite part. It was the only part that made sense
to me.
So we would sing a song and then she would meditate and then the spirit would come through.
Dr. Duran, who was a 14th century doctor. And basically he would say a sermon and then he would open up for questions.
So people basically saw advice from him.
How many folks were in attendance normally?
A hundred at its peak. When I was growing up, it was probably more like 50.
And was it held in a church or what kind of space?
We had this trance room that was locked out, no windows or anything.
Because she needed darkness.
But it wasn't so dark that you couldn't see her.
And it's so hard because this was real for all of us, but it wasn't, obviously.
But I grew up in it, so it was all I knew.
I just remember being a kid sitting in church and going like, I don't know.
Were you having any battle?
Later on when I got older, but no, they created chaos so that you just wanted to be a part
of this family. So Trina and Stephen had kids and grandkids. And there was a hierarchy.
They were treated better than my family. It was all based on money. And I realize that
now they targeted people who had rich families.
And my mom had wealthy parents, my dad didn't.
But my parents weren't giving any money because my grandparents wouldn't provide.
So they were basically just treated like the lowest on the totem pole.
My mom and dad never had a chance.
I'm surprised they weren't like, we got to get out of here.
No one's even being nice to us.
If you can't climb the ladder.
Yeah. What's the incentive?
We were told that we are the closest to God because we're with the spirit in this lifetime.
So it did have some like Buddhist principles. We believed in reincarnation and we believe
that this life was our last because we were with the spirit. So we were special.
I see. Was it Christianity linked or no? Not really. We would make fun of it a little bit.
So trance, you never knew what you were going to get. Sometimes it was him like, Oh my God,
you guys need to lighten up and have a party. Literally the spirit talking through her was
telling us this or he would rip people to shreds. And then after trans,
sometimes there were like processes where the adults would all get together and they'd
all drink alcohol and just like rip each other a new one.
Wow.
I wasn't there. I was too young, but I was usually babysitting the kids by the time they
got home. You could tell they had been crying and just unregulated.
Oh my God. Okay. This again is like the game, this kind of group participation therapy where you
call out each other's character defects. People would make stuff up just to like get
the attention off of them. Yeah. That was what was happening in the game is like, you want to sit down
with the gun loaded to direct at someone else to get the heat off yourself. So you're like incentivized.
Yeah, it was pretty bad.
There were good parts like growing up in Tonno Village.
I had a bunch of friends and it was dirt roads
and it was a good place to grow up,
but it was pretty toxic.
We had our own school.
You weren't encouraged to go out
and get a degree or anything.
You were encouraged to just stay small.
Service was a big thing.
People who weren't even qualified
would be teaching at the school with no pay.
Free bad teaching. This is what we offer.
We think teachers who do get paid don't get paid enough.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Let alone these teachers. I was so afraid of everybody. It was so scary. But also I
wanted their approval so bad. But my dad was always kind of like half in, half
out. He didn't actually want to go. He did it for my mom. And so when I was seven, they
divorced and he kind of left the community. But even before that, he was just painted
as a terrible person because he didn't want to be there. And that showed. I knew my dad
was a good guy. I loved him. But people would talk crap about him in front of me
Oh, that's the cruelest thing you can do
I was part of the problem with trance was you were like asking a question and then you're airing all of your shit in
front of everybody and in front of the kids
Do you know what it was that your mom was getting out of it? At first, she wanted a community.
And then they end up creating chaos to where it's like, if you leave the community, you're
leaving all of your friends, your family, you'll lose everything.
And that's what they do.
They make it so that you can't leave.
There were people who left, but it sounds easy to just pick up and leave, but it's not.
You don't have anything.
Yeah. Yeah, starting from scratch. how far away did your dad move? He just moved down to Phoenix area
So I would still see him but not very often
So later on when I was 11 years old
My mom decided to get a boyfriend who did not want to be in the community
It was just kind of looked down upon to have a boyfriend at all. And he was a Vietnam vet. He was sort of abusive. So I had to live with
him for a little bit.
Basically, my mom was shunned because she wanted to be with this man who didn't want
to be in the community. So there was a point around that time where I was also shunned.
The whole community was having Thanksgiving at Trina and Stephen's house. And I wasn't
allowed to go. I met with my sister and she's like, Fran, you're not allowed. My oldest
sister, I'm the youngest of five. But she was my person when my mom wasn't around.
Why was she allowed to go?
Because she had her own life. She actually got pregnant at 16. That was part of it too.
You get married and you have babies, assigned marriages. She had a baby at 16 because they told her, don't wear a
condom, it hurts.
How old was the dude?
He was only a couple years older than her, but they ended up getting married and then
torn apart because one of the leader's daughters wanted to marry the guy she was with.
Oh boy. Yeah, my sister's the real MVP. She's the first born child of the cult. And I say it shows.
So she told me, I can't go. They're mad at my mom. And I was like heartbroken about that.
So later on, I'm going to feed my horses. And I'm walking past Trina and Steven's house,
which is where everyone was gathered. And my friend past Trina and Stephen's houses, which is where everyone
was gathered. And my friend Scout came outside and she's like, Fran, what are you doing innocently?
She's like, come on, we're all having a party. And I was like, okay. So I go up the stairs
and I get abused by Stephen Camp, who is the leader. He just screamed at me in front of
everyone told me that I can't be there.
I need to go home and I'm 11 years old.
Oh my God.
Oh my God.
Yeah, what a fucking coward.
Oh, he was a scary, scary guy.
I don't even remember to be honest, what I did
after that, it was pretty traumatizing.
So I had moved out of the house because of
the guy she was with.
So I moved in with my sister for a little while and then I was going to move back.
I was told this later, but Paul, her boyfriend didn't want me to move back in.
And so he asked her for a divorce.
And then after that, my mom took her own life.
Oh my goodness.
What a horrific hand.
You've really been through the wringer.
After my mom died,
it was like my family was finally in it.
We were finally treated better,
which is just absolutely crazy.
They decided to extend some compassion in the wake of that?
Or did they feel guilty?
I think they felt guilty.
Basically, she just lost her whole support system because the women in the wake of that? Or did they feel guilty? I think they felt guilty. Basically she just lost her whole support system
because the women in the family all stopped talking to her.
And then the guy that she was doing it for
wanted to leave her.
And he was just a terrible person.
What age were you when that happened?
I was 11.
Oh my God. Oh Jesus.
It was rough.
I don't blame them for it,
but I do think my mom dying did shatter the glass a little,
had people questioning, what the fuck are we doing here?
And then I didn't actually leave myself because I was young, but I ended up living with multiple
different families plus my sister.
And it just got worse once I was living with the cult leader's daughter
and they were really sweet. Like everyone's a victim to this, I think, including their
children. I had a boyfriend at 15. I went to trance one time and I got called a whore
in trance. My spirit called me a whore.
Was that boyfriend part of this?
No, he wasn't.
When you were around other people, were you like embarrassed
to talk about it? No, it was kind of a joke like, oh, you guys live in Tono Village. You guys are
part of that cult. And we're like, yeah, you guys think it's a cult. It's not. I listened to a recent
recording of a trance, which it's the only one I have. I don't know where they all are because
they recorded them all. In the recording, he says, yeah, because everyone out there thinks we're a cult. We're not. They were
always trying to stress that we're not a cult. In school, they showed us Jim Jones and David
Koresh. They showed us those and they're like, see, that's a cult. If no one gets murdered,
it's not a cult.
Yeah.
How do you exit?
Eventually, my sister moved down to the valley, down to Phoenix. She tried to stay in it.
But basically, if you're away, they're not really letting you do it. Everybody tithed
money. Everyone was paying for Trina and Stephen's life.
For her weekly show.
Exactly. My sister went up there to tithe and I guess she was trying to quit smoking.
One of the cult leaders' daughters said, oh, Tosh is trying to quit smoking.
And Trina went, smoking doesn't cause cancer.
And Tosh was like, okay, that's it.
Like that was her last straw.
Well, 14th century doctors don't really know yet about small cell carcinoma.
The irony too of the spirit being invoked somehow would have some elevated something
because they were a 14th century doctor. Like nobody on earth right now would be as bad of a doctor as a
14th century doctor.
Exactly. Right? And he would give medical advice.
Oh, God.
What blood pressure medication are you on? I don't like it.
Oh, my God.
Even though he only dealt in bloodletting and probably leeches.
Yeah, like my friend's mom died of a stroke.
If we were getting actual medical care, we would have known that she had high blood pressure.
But instead we were listening to the spirit.
So that kind of stuff makes me really angry.
Did you end up having a relationship with your dad?
Turns out he had manic bipolar, which he also would have known if therapy was a thing or
if medical psychology was a thing.
So I ended up having a relationship with him and then it kind of fell out because I didn't
go live with him.
I live with my sister.
And then he had a huge episode, kept having episodes.
He would get off his meds, on his meds, and then he started doing drugs.
And so now his brain is pretty frapped.
Yeah.
Oh man.
We still have a relationship with him.
We love him.
He comes over for dinner and everything, but he's just not the same guy.
Francesca, you have been dealt quite a fucking hand.
My Lord, the fact that you're in that cute sweater and put together.
I made this sweater.
Oh my gosh.
So cute.
One of the guys from the cult is a chess master
because there was like this whole thing.
Steven was obsessed with chess.
He was a co-founder of chess.com,
which is where you play online chess.
And he just wrote a book and it's coming out in September.
And it's gonna be about the cult a little bit
and also his chess journey. Did he ultimately leave the cult? Will it be a gonna be about the cult a little bit and also his chest journey.
Did he ultimately leave the cult?
Will it be a critical look at the cult?
Yes, everyone has left the cult.
There are still people that still have it in their brain.
They're so brainwashed that it's still real for him,
including my dad.
He'll go in and out because he was so abused by them.
But yeah, the cult is dismantled.
I wanna see Trina's show. I wish she would just do it at a black box theater so I could
see it as like a one woman show.
She used to do public trances. She passed actually. She died three years ago. It was
like an alcohol induced dementia, which makes sense. I still don't know if she was in on
it. It's so hard. It's hard to know that. Or
was it Stephen like saw this craziness about her and decided to capitalize on it. I wish
I could be a fly on the wall to hear a conversation that went on. If we're to like just look at
the pattern of history and acknowledge it is real and my hunch is Stephen was somehow
pulling the strings of this whole thing. Definitely, but I think probably at some point,
whether she started off believing it,
I'm sure at some point she did believe
she was channeling this person.
I don't think you can keep that up for that long
if it's a full ruse.
This is a terrible false equivalency,
but we've talked about it on here with other improv people.
A lot of comedians have certain characters,
I have a couple of them, that when I start
talking like them, they have a whole language that I don't necessarily have.
Sure.
A robot.
It's true.
The second I'm talking is Frito.
All of these thoughts are just very quickly there.
They're not my normal thoughts.
I've not even tried to embrace that in a way that would be my identity.
But I understand the notion of feeling like
you're creating things that aren't really yours.
Does that make sense?
Yeah.
For her to buy into it.
I don't think it'd be that hard to buy into it.
Yeah, I mean, not to get so Buddhist,
but we are all sort of buying into our identities
all the time.
It's not that much of a stretch to believe something about yourself and then just be it
Yeah, I think your brain does crazy stuff, especially if you have some dementia going on later on. Yeah
I'm impressed. You've made it out and I'm doing okay me and all my siblings are doing pretty well
Good. Oh good. Happy to hear that my sister, I just want to shout her out.
Her name is Tosh.
She raised me pretty much.
Oh, good on you, Tosh.
Big shout out.
Well, Francesca, thank you for sharing all that with us.
That was heavy, and I'm sorry for all that.
I'm sure it will help a lot of people.
You never know who's listening,
who might be in a bad situation
and needs to be heard and seen.
Yeah, just know that they're creating chaos to keep you there.
Yeah.
Well, thank you so much for chatting with us.
Yeah.
It was so nice to meet you guys.
I can't believe this.
This is crazy.
Really nice to meet you.
All right.
Take care.
Bye.
What you would hope people would hear is there's such a pattern to all this stuff.
Exactly.
They all do almost the same thing.
The arranged marriage piece is interesting that that's come up multiple times.
The beating you down.
The group criticism.
Yeah, if any of these things are happening in your book club, you know, maybe the book
club is a...
Maybe take a second, plants, my teeth look really white.
Yeah, you have exceptionally white and nice teeth.
If you wanna have white teeth, just join this email.
Join now for 1999.
And I'll also throw in a free sermon.
I wanna see you channel and talk in tongues.
I want you to lose your marbles a little bit
for an hour every Sunday.
I would go to your show. Then you'd be laughing at me and then I'd cry.
No, you wouldn't.
You'd be a warlock from the 14th century.
I understand how it happens.
You're there and it's what you know,
but it's so amazing what the brain does
that it can't just pull out for a minute,
but they do a good job of saying it's not a cult.
I was exposed to some weird stuff.
I went to church on Sundays, two different religions, whatever, that's standard. a minute, but they do a good job of saying it's not a cult. I was exposed to some weird stuff.
I went to church on Sundays, two different religions,
whatever, that's standard.
But my father was also quite woo-woo-y, right?
Like through AA, he found ACOA,
Adult Children of Alcoholics,
and then The Course in Miracles,
and then all of it's fine.
But I was in a basement with him where guys like
making someone hold something, then pushing on your liver
and then pushing the arm down.
A lot of the people that are in there are there
and they're kind of intrigued by it.
There's crystals.
I don't want this sound like a pat on the back to myself
or casting any shame on anybody.
But I'm just not very susceptible.
I was like, what the fuck?
Okay, but the reason you weren't is because
you had an environment that also was opposite that.
Yes, in fact applauded critical skepticism.
Yeah, so if everyone you know is doing one thing,
there's no way.
I'm not suggesting that I too couldn't be this way.
I just am remembering that I was in lots
of different situations where I was like,
this is horseshit.
And this is why they don't wanna let other people in.
They shouldn't invite me in,
because I'll probably be like, hold on,
how do you know about that?
That wasn't invented in the 16th century.
I'd like bust the 14th century doctor.
Then everyone stand up and go,
oh my God, the spell's been broken.
Thank you, Dax Shepard, you are our new leader.
Exactly, that's what you were always wanting.
I am the leader of the truth.
I have a proprietary understanding.
Ew, you sound just like all of them.
Get off your clothes and let's talk about your spirit.
Bye.
Do you wanna sing a tune or something? Or a theme song?
Oh, okay, go. We're gonna ask some random questions
and with the help of Armchairs, we'll get some suggestions.
On the flyer, I'm dish.
On the flyer, I'm dish.
Enjoy.
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