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Introduction to Special Collection: Recovery  From Cults: A Pastoral/Psychological Dialogue - Personal Accounts of Former Group MembersThe following articles are edited transcriptions of talks given by four former  group members who participated in a joint two-day conference of AFF and Denver  Theological Seminary: Nancy Miquelon, Patrick Knapp, Carson Miles, and David  Clark. The conference’s title was “Recovery from Cults: A Pastoral/Psychological  Dialogue. In addition to the former member talks published here, the conference  included talks by Dr. Ronald Enroth, Dr. Michael Langone, Dr. Paul Martin, and  Gretchen Passantino. Dr. James Beck of Denver Seminary moderated the conference.  Herbert Rosedale, Esq., of AFF and Dr. Douglas Groothuis of Denver Seminary were  discussants.
 
 The talks of the former members were designed to illuminate the psychological  and spiritual issues former group members frequently encounter and the  similarities and differences of evangelical and secular approaches to recovery  issues. Two of the former members (Clark and Miquelon) have been active in cult  educational work with secular organizations and rely primarily on the thought  reform model of cult conversion. Two (Knapp and Miles) initially sought help  from evangelical cult educational organizations and have been associated with  Denver Seminary. They also recognize the abusiveness of cultic environments, but  rely on family systems and pastoral counseling models of cult conversion. All  four contributors are currently practicing Christians.
 
 AFF is grateful to Denver Theological Seminary for providing a facility for the  conference and for collaborating in its design, promotion, and execution. We are  grateful, in particular, to Dr. James Beck, director of the seminary’s  counseling program, and Dr. Douglas Groothuis, Assistant Professor of Philosophy  of Religion and Ethics. A special debt of gratitude is owed Sharon Hamm, a  writer from Fort Collins, Colorado. Ms. Hamm volunteered to prepare these talks  for publication. Without her patient and skillful editing, these papers would  have remained rough transcriptions.
 
 AFF also wishes to thank the speakers, whose thoughtful contributions made the  conference stimulating and memorable. The papers presented here will, I hope,  help readers appreciate the complexity and subtlety of the cult experience and  recognize that we need more nuanced theories of cult conversion than currently  exist.
 
 
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This article is an electronic version of an article originally published in Cultic Studies Journal, 1998, Volume 15, Number 2, pages 107-108. Please keep in mind that the pagination of this electronic reprint differs from that of the bound volume. This fact could affect how you enter bibliographic information in papers that you may write. 
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 References
 Two groups of former cultists were administered the MCMI and other psychological  tests in order to assess the nature and magnitude of post-cult psychological  problems. One group consisted of 13 former cultists who attended an educational  conference on cults. The other group was made up of Ill former cultists who  attended a residential treatment center. In order to evaluate the effectiveness  of this treatment, 66 members of the latter group participated in a six-month  followup. Post-cult distress at initial testing was high and did not differ  between groups. Pre-post evaluations of the treatment group indicated a strong  treatment effect. Marked personality configuration shifts in the MCMI profile  after treatment occurred. Results appear to support the view that dissociative  processes are central to the cult experience.
 
 
| AFF News Briefs - Vol. 01, No. 04, 2002 - print |  | Childhood Verbal, Physical, Sexual Victimization, Symptomatology and Family Environments within Coercive Groups and Resultant Treatment Outcomes |  | INTERNATIONAL: Sweden-American Cult Experts Consult in Sweden |  | Overcoming the Bondage of Revictimization: response to Passantino |  | Paul Martin |  | Pitfalls To Recovery by Dr. Paul Martin |  | Post-Cult Symptoms As Measured by the MCMI Before and After Residential Treatment |  | Professional Profile: Dr. Paul Martin |  | Study Indicates Rehab's Benefits |  | The Lifton Scale |  | The Wellspring Treatment Model for Victims of Cults and Cultic Relationships 
 
 
 
Paul R. Martin, Ph.D. 
 
ICSA is sad to          report that Dr. Paul R. Martin passed away          after a long illness on Friday, August 14,          2009.  Dr. Martin was one of the leading          figures in the cultic studies field.  He          contributed immeasurably to the recovery of          more than 1,000 former cult members,          provided counsel to families, trained          professionals, and was a pioneer of clinical          research in this field.  
You will find          personal details in Dr. Martin's                   obituary.  We wish his family and          friends our deepest condolences. 
 
 Paul          R. Martin, Ph.D., a former member of          Great Commission International (currently          called Great Commission Association of          Churches), was a psychologist and Director          of the Wellspring Retreat and Resource          Center in Albany, Ohio, a residential          rehabilitation center for ex-cult members          that has treated over 1000 clients.  Dr.          Martin was author of Cult-Proofing Your          Kids.  He wrote numerous articles on          cults, including several contributions to          Cultic Studies Journal, such as, “Pseudo          Identity and the Treatment of Personality          Change in Victims of Captivity and Cults”           (Vol. 13. No. 2).  He was  interviewed by          many newspapers and radio and TV stations          concerning cults. He served as an expert          witness in cult cases around the world, and          was the lead expert witness for the Lee Boyd          Malvo trial (the Virginia sniper case) and          testified in the Zacarious Moussoui case,          (the  20th  hijacker) on the process of          terrorist recruitment. He was the 2006 ICSA          recipient of the Herbert L. Rosedale Award          for leadership in preserving and protecting          individual freedom. In 1993, he also          received the John G. Clark Award for          Distinguished Scholarship in Cultic          Studies. Return to Dr. Martin's Obituary
 Video's by          Paul Martin
 Reflections from          reFOCUS
 
 
 
In our E-library
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Study  Indicates Rehab’s Benefits 
Because cults can be  oppressive environments, and because people who leave cults are frequently  disillusioned and overwhelmed by the challenge of adjusting to mainstream  society, former cult members experience a high level of distress. Research  studies suggest that more than one-third and possibly more than one-half of  those who have left cultic groups have been detrimentally affected by their  cultic experience. One researcher has written: “Members may be harmed in that  they lose their psychological autonomy and, frequently, their financial assets.  Furthermore, the group’s partial-to-total disconnection from mainline society  deprives members of the opportunity to learn from the varied experiences that a  normal life provides. Members may lose irretrievable years in a state of  ‘maturational arrest.’ In some cases they undergo psychiatric breakdowns and/or  suffer from physical disease and injury.”   A survey of 350 ex-cultists from 48  different groups found that former members suffered from residual effects of  their cult experience lasting from 43.8 months to 139 months, with an average  duration of 81.5 months. These effects included such things as depression,  loneliness, guilt, anger, fear, humiliation, disorientation, “floating” in and  out of altered states, nightmares, and an inability to break mental rhythms of  chanting, meditation, or speaking in tongues. Deprogrammed subjects appeared to  recover more quickly. Clinicians who have worked extensively with former  cultists say that most require six months to two years to adjust adequately.  Some require much more time. 
Ex-cultists often need so  much time to readjust because so many areas of their lives are adversely  affected simultaneously. Most cultists are implicitly, if not explicitly,  encouraged to burn all interpersonal bridges to the mainstream world. When they  leave the cult, they are usually shunned by their cult “friends” and met with  puzzlement, hurt, and anger by the old friends and relatives they had ignored  for so long. Because of their devotion to the cult’s “cause,” many cultists  abandon school, career plans, and even functioning careers in order to serve the  group. Leaving a group that appeared to provide spiritual meaning will often  leave ex-cultists feeling spiritually empty or spiritually raped. And, in part  because they had been indoctrinated in the cult to believe that the group was  always right, many former cultists consider themselves to be failures or  seriously inadequate. Thus, former cultists often have interpersonal,  vocational, spiritual, and intrapersonal conflicts and deficiencies. 
Although it can certainly be  helpful, weekly psychotherapy may be insufficient for many former cultists. That  is why many have attended special residential treatment programs. The Wellspring  Retreat and Resource Center, for example, offers a comprehensive program of  in‑depth psychological assessment and treatment usually lasting two weeks.   Clients receive a full psychological test battery and assessment interview.   They participate in workshops that address common postcult problems, e.g.,  depression, grieving and loss, establishing career goals, spiritual issues.  All  clients receive extensive one-on-one therapy. And all clients receive an  intensive education on psychological manipulation, thought reform programs, and  the cult conversion process. 
The term “rehabilitation” has  been applied to this process because, like persons recovering from physical  injuries, ex-cultists require an intensive program in order to bring them back  at least to the level at which they once functioned.  Also, as with the  physically injured, most ex-cultists were relatively normal before they were  seduced into a destructive group. 
Wellspring has conducted the  only formal outcome evaluation study with the ex-cult rehabilitation population.  The results are encouraging. Wellspring clients are routinely administered the  Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory (MCMI) at intake and, in most cases, at a  six-month follow-up. The improvement in all clinical sub-scales, including  dysthymia and anxiety, was dramatic, with the exception of the psychotic  delusion scale, which was normal at the time of admission. Treatment  effectiveness was not enhanced, on the Millon inventory, if clients sought  further psychiatric care once they left Wellspring. Wellspring research  indicates, then, that additional psychotherapy following postcult  rehabilitation does not appreciably reduce the ex-members’ symptomatology. The  study, however, did not include consideration of psychotherapy gains through  work with mental health professionals trained to recognize and deal with  cult-related symptoms and dynamics. Such work may greatly aid the recovery  process. 
To conclude, an intensive  postcult rehabilitation program may be a cost-effective treatment for former  cult members. By clarifying the cult-related issues troubling the client, it can  lay the groundwork for a more productive psychotherapeutic relationship. 
Langone, M.D.,  Destructive Cultism: Questions and Answers. Bonita Springs, FL:  American Family Foundation, 1982, 7. 
Conway, F. et al.  Information Disease: Effects of Covert Induction and Deprogramming. Update  10  (3) 1986, 63-65 and Update, 10 (3). 45-57 
 
 
This article is an electronic version of an article originally  published in Cultic Studies Journal, 1992, Volume 9, Number 2, pages 219-250.  Please keep in mind that the pagination of this electronic reprint differs from  that of the bound volume. This fact could affect how you enter bibliographic  information in papers that you may write. 
Post-Cult Symptoms As Measured by the MCMI Before and After Residential  Treatment
 
Abstract
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