Showing posts with label Cult-leaders. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cult-leaders. Show all posts

Mar 8, 2024

The 9 Most Common Personality Traits In Cult Leaders

Cult and mental health experts reveal the characteristics often found in those who seek to control and manipulate others.

Caroline Bologna
HuffPost 
March 8, 2024

With hit documentaries like “Love Has Won” and “Escaping Twin Flames” and podcasts like “Let’s Talk About Sects” and “Escaping NXIVM,” it’s clear the public fascination with all things cult is alive and well.

So too are audiences curious about cult leaders, who manage to compel everyday people to adopt outlandish beliefs and do horrible things.

“Cult leaders are notable for the enormous amount of power they have over their group,” Ashlen Hilliard, a cult intervention specialist and founder of People Leave Cults, told HuffPost. “This power is what many look for when defining a cult, but it’s not the only aspect that creates a cult leader. When you take a closer look, a cult leader often exhibits a classic set of traits and behaviors. Although there is variety in how these traits present, certain themes tend to ring true.”

We asked Hilliard and other experts to break down some of those common characteristics. Here’s what they said:

Charisma

“Cult leaders are often highly charismatic and persuasive, with a magnetic personality that can attract and influence followers,” Hilliard said.

Cult leaders tend to be charming and clever, and use that charm to persuade people that doing what the leader commands is the best way to achieve their personal goals.

“They would never have followers if they didn’t know how to make people feel special and like they’re actually the center of attention,” said mental health counselor and leading cult expert Steven Hassan. “They say the right words, but it’s not genuine. It’s acting.”

Social psychologist and cult expert Alexandra Stein emphasized that being charming is not inherently toxic, however.

“Charisma is a personality trait that may be common amongst cult leaders, but if you know someone who is charismatic, that certainly doesn’t mean that they are on the pipeline to becoming a cult leader,” Stein said. “I like to ask the following questions: How are they utilizing their charisma? Is there the potential for abuse? How would they respond to criticism of their actions?”

Authoritarian Control

“Cult leaders often have a strong need for control and may exhibit authoritarian behaviors, such as dictating the beliefs and actions of their followers,” Hilliard said.

The cult leader’s typical objective is to gain power over others, and to make their followers feel unable to break free.

“Coercive control is a pattern of behavior used to dominate, intimidate, and manipulate someone,” Hilliard explained. “This can include a range of tactics, such as isolating the victim from friends and family, monitoring their movements, controlling their access to money and resources, and using threats or physical force to maintain control.”

“When a cult group or leader applies coercive control to a follower, that person may be left feeling that their only viable path is to remain in the group ― even if unspeakable acts are committed.” - ASHLEN HILLIARD, CULT EXPERT

She noted that there tends to be “a gradual escalation of abusive behavior,” as the leader employs psychological, emotional or physical tactics to maintain power.

“When a cult group or leader applies coercive control to a follower, that person may be left feeling that their only viable path is to remain in the group ― even if unspeakable acts are committed,” Hilliard added.

That’s why cults often operate with strict routines and particular eating and sleeping habits.

“Cult leaders even manipulate people into not having personal preferences,” said Robin Stern, a psychoanalyst and co-founder of the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence. “Some people who grow up in cults don’t even know how to recognize their own emotions because they were told what to feel and [that] certain feelings weren’t allowed.”

She added that most cult leaders are master gaslighters who assert their reality over the reality of their followers, sow divisions and undermine people’s perceptions of their own feelings and beliefs.

Inability To Tolerate Being Wrong

“Cult leaders are not able to tolerate being wrong, nor do they want to have to take any responsibility for having wronged you,” said Rachel Bernstein, a licensed marriage and family therapist and host of the “IndoctriNation” podcast.

“So if you have been hurt by them, it’s somehow your fault, because you must have done something to deserve it, and it’s your weakness that caused their mistreatment of you to bother you,” Bernstein continued. “They are ultimately emotionally protected and impervious.”

She also noted that cult leaders tend to answer to no one and live by their own rules. It’s their world, and others need to learn how to exist in it.

“They often feel they are above the law, are beyond reproach, and enjoy shaming those in the group who defy them, disagree with them or, in essence, hurt their ego in any way,” Bernstein added.

That’s why it’s difficult to try to confront or reason with a cult leader.

“When cult leaders are confronted, or somebody questions anything they’re doing, they are likely to turn it to blame someone else and say they’re thinking in the wrong way or they’re being influenced by an outside force, like a parent or loved one,” Stern said.

“Sometimes when followers have contact with [their] family members, they question what the cult leader is doing or asking [the cult follower] to do,” Stern added. “Often then, the cult leader is critical of the family and puts them down or tries to gaslight the cult member into thinking that their family does not have their best interest at heart.”

Malignant Narcissism

Many cult leaders ”are malignant narcissists — those who have sociopathy and simply do not care about the pain they inflict, the damage they cause, and the lives they derail in order to get their very powerful ego needs met,” Bernstein said. “They are insatiable in their neediness and no amount of devotion and sacrifice ever quite feels like enough. So followers of these kinds of cult leaders often feel they are failing, and they need to work harder and sacrifice more of themselves each day.”

She said narcissistic cult leaders tend to lack empathy for others and may stop at nothing to get what they want.

“[E]verything they did or were asked to do was in the service of the narcissistic needs of the cult leaders ― often their financial needs or sexual desires.” - ROBIN STERN, PSYCHOANALYST

“They often use doing charitable work or speaking about caring about others as a way to come across as loving, but ultimately it’s a way to launder their reputations,” Bernstein added. “When we look at the fact that most cult leaders are malignant narcissists, those with this disorder don’t often come with an ethical core that drives them. They don’t think about how to make a difference in the world, but rather craft a world where they are the gods and others are to live their lives doing good for them.”

Cult leaders frequently make their followers feel as though they need to work hard to earn the leader’s trust, rather than the other way around.

“I’ve heard from people in cults that they felt their life was going really well and that they were doing something special in the world,” Stern said. “They felt seen, heard and understood. But what they didn’t see for some time ― sometimes a long time ― was that everything they did or were asked to do was in the service of the narcissistic needs of the cult leaders ― often their financial needs or sexual desires.”

Unpredictability

Unpredictability is a common trait in cult leaders as well.

“A cult leader often benefits from members and outside authorities not knowing their next move,” Hilliard said. “This can add to an air of divine inspiration or help convince devotees of [the leader’s] supernatural powers.”

By sowing chaos and uncertainty, cult leaders can establish their mere leadership presence as the only constant, even if their own behaviors are inconsistent. Followers are left with the singular goal of pleasing their leader.

“They keep followers in an unstable relationship with them, walking on eggshells,” Stein said. “The followers never know if the ‘nice’ leader or the angry, cruel leader is going to appear at any given time.”

Insecure Attachment Issues

“The latest theory amongst mental health professionals is that people with this level of disorder had insecure attachment in their first few years,” Hassan said.

He emphasized the power of loving caregivers. Growing up with someone who offers support and encouragement helps people develop a healthy sense of self.

“But these cult leaders have a hole where they should have a sense of self, so they’re always trying to compensate by getting people’s attention or feeling power over others, because they felt so helpless as a child,” Hassan added. “That’s a common profile.”

He noted that many cult leaders grew up in cults themselves and learned patterns of manipulation, control and abuse from adults, instead of developmentally appropriate, empowering and authoritative ― not authoritarian ― parenting.

Delusion

“Cult leaders may hold unconventional or bizarre beliefs that are not grounded in reality, and may promote these beliefs to their followers as absolute truths,” Hilliard said.

The role of delusional beliefs in cults tends to generate headlines. Much of the recent attention on the Twin Flames Universe revolved around members’ fervent commitment to idea that they needed to be with one specific person ― even if it meant stalking that person or violating a restraining order. Members of the Love Has Won cult consumed colloidal silver for extended periods of time, even after seeing the physical harm it could cause.

“Some cult leaders are suffering with a delusional disorder, but their charisma causes them to attract others who ... believe their delusions,” Bernstein said.

“They are the ultimate judge and jury, deciding who moves up in the ranks and who gets demoted on a daily basis, so everyone is on edge, not ever knowing where they truly stand or where they will stand tomorrow.” - RACHEL BERNSTEIN, THERAPIST

Sense Of Grandiosity

“When someone is beguiled into a cult, they’re working for the good, the pleasure or narcissistic needs of the cult leader, but they’re often told their work has some higher purpose and they’re going to find meaning and happiness in a way they’ve never had,” Stern said. “It’s very effective, especially when the process of gaslighting and brainwashing is enhanced by tactics such as sleep deprivation, food control and isolation from their previous life.”

She pointed to the way many leaders create steps and levels of ascension into power for their followers ― and then use that system to make their followers feel important and recruit even more members.

“They are the ultimate judge and jury, deciding who moves up in the ranks and who gets demoted on a daily basis, so everyone is on edge, not ever knowing where they truly stand or where they will stand tomorrow,” Bernstein said. “This is a way to get people to be working day and night to prove their allegiance in order to keep themselves safe in the group and liked by the leader, the person whose approval matters now more than anyone else’s.”

She noted that cult leaders tend to get “drunk with their power of being a Pied Piper.” As their following grows, so too does their self-importance and their craving for even more admiration and attention.

“They lie, build grandiose life stories, often with a kind of ‘once was blind but now I see and therefore have all the answers’ narrative,” Stein added.

Exploitation

“Cult leaders may exploit their followers financially, sexually or emotionally, using their position of power to gain personal benefits at the expense of their followers,” Hilliard said.

They exert undue influence on followers ― meaning they pressure or persuade people to do things that they wouldn’t otherwise do and that often run counter to their own best interests.

“For instance, a cult leader may convince a follower to sign over properties, businesses, or financial assets to the group to show their commitment,” Hilliard said. “Once those exchanges take place, the follower may feel that they have to remain in the group or risk losing everything. Undue influence can be difficult to identify, as the person being influenced may not be aware that they are being manipulated or may feel too intimidated to resist.”

She highlighted the many crimes committed by notorious cult leaders like Charles Manson and Jim Jones ― murder, terrorism, sex trafficking, sexual abuse, fraud, drug smuggling and more.

“It takes more than charisma to convince people to go along with ― or commit ― acts like these,” Hilliard said.

Stern stressed that people in cults usually lose their sense of personal identity.

“They often stop what they were doing before they met the leader ― going to school, having a job, being connected with friends and family,” she explained. “They are often seduced into a psychological state where they are disinterested in anything other than working for the cult and the promise of the cult.”

The role of leaders in actively controlling and exploiting people is part of what separates actual authoritarian cults from say, fandoms that get described as “cultish.”

“People ask me about Taylor Swift,” Hassan said. “But you can be a total fanatic fan of Taylor Swift and still have your own mind, conscience, freedom to ask questions and freedom to leave without fear or threats or a dissociative disorder.”

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/cult-leaders-personality-traits-common_l_65c17191e4b0dbc806adcdba

Aug 26, 2019

CultNEWS101 Articles: 8/26/2019




Cult Leaders, Miracle Mineral Solutions, Mindfulness

Openingminds: Think Like A Cult Leader - Part Three Braggadocio
In this 14-part series, Jon and Sam discuss the fine art of how to be a cult leader. In part three, they talk about how braggadocio, or how to let everyone know just how fabulous you are.

In this 14-part series, Jon and Sam discuss the fine art of how to be a cult leader. In part four, they talk about conquering anxiety and fear, an important part of just not giving a darn.

"The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is urging people not to drink a solution often promoted online as a remedy for autism, HIV, cancer and other conditions.

The products, known as Miracle Mineral Supplement, Miracle Mineral Solution, Master Mineral Solution, MMS, or chlorine dioxide protocol, are not approved by the FDA.

The agency says ingesting the solution, when mixed, is the same as drinking bleach, and it can have potentially life-threatening side effects.

The products were first promoted 20 years ago as a remedy for just about every ailment by a former scientologist.

This is not the first time that the FDA has issued such warnings about these products."
"Mindfulness meditation appears to have beneficial effects on various aspects of life. But new research suggests that mindfulness doesn't automatically enhance only the good side of people."

" ... 'Practicing mindfulness may not automatically increase prosocial and moral behavior. Across five experiments, we found that a brief mindfulness exercise even attenuated moral reactions. Mindfulness — without being embedded in an ethical context — may thus have downsides regarding interpersonal and moral behavior that have been so far ignored by researchers and also practitioners,' Schindler told PsyPost.

In mindfulness meditation, practitioners learn to develop an accepting and nonjudgmental toward present moment thoughts and feelings. The authors of the study believe this may be responsible for blunting moral responses, but more research is needed to understand the underlying processes.

"Our findings raise a lot of questions and are far away from providing a final answer on this topic. It is important to investigate the robustness and the boundary conditions of the found effects. In the future, for example, we aim to apply long-term mindfulness interventions lasting several weeks instead of only ten minutes," Schindler said.

And, of course, the findings shouldn't be interpreted as suggesting that mindfulness meditation always promotes immoral behavior. "Practicing mindfulness can also certainly lead to stronger moral or less immoral reactions, for example, when the otherwise experienced feeling (e.g., feelings of vengeance or anger) would result in harming another person," the researchers noted in their study."




News, Education, Intervention, Recovery

CultMediation.com   
Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.
CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families make the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.
CultNEWS101.com news, links, resources.
Cults101.org resources about cults, cultic groups, abusive relationships, movements, religions, political organizations and related topics.

Aug 15, 2019

Think Like A Cult Leader - Part Four - Conquering Anxiety and Fear

Openingminds
August 15, 2019

In this 14-part series, Jon and Sam discuss the fine art of how to be a cult leader. In part four, they talk about conquering anxiety and fear, an important part of just not giving a darn.


Think Like A Cult Leader - Part Three - Braggadocio

Openingminds
Published on Aug 15, 2019

In this 14-part series, Jon and Sam discuss the fine art of how to be a cult leader. In part three, they talk about how braggadocio, or how to let everyone know just how fabulous you are.


Feb 16, 2017

Antisocial Personality Disorder in Cult Leaders, Dependent Personality Disorder in Cult Members


John Burke, Ph.D.

A number of studies have found evidence of antisocial acts and behaviors by cult leaders toward cult followers (Martin, Langone, Dole and Wiltrout, 1992; Tobias, & Lalich, 1994; West & Martin, 1999; and Kent, 2004). Each of these studies offers well-documented evidence of antisocial acts and behaviors by cult leaders toward cult members. These published accounts, as well as previously unpublished author research, are used to develop an explanatory model of the personality organization of the cult leader. Additionally, the emergence of dependent personality disorder and other psychological sequelae among cult members is investigated. Diagnostic criteria and descriptions describing antisocial personality disorder as published in Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, 4th Edition (1994) can be employed as part of the characterization of the personality organization of the cult leader. The author has participated as a clinical team member in the diagnosis of personality disorders for juvenile offenders in the California Juvenile Probation Department and for juvenile and adult offenders in the Colorado Department of Corrections. A number of peer-reviewed studies including studies by Martin, Langone, Dole, and Wiltrout, (1992); Tobias & Lalich, (1994); West & Martin, (1999); and Kent (2004), present findings from clinical interviews of ex-cult members, which report many different antisocial acts and behaviors by cult leaders. These accounts detail numerous instances of personal mistreatment, psychological intimidation, and physical and sexual abuse of cult members by cult leaders, and offer credible evidence for the hypothesis that cult leaders may meet minimum DSM-IV criteria for diagnosis of antisocial personality disorder (ASPD).

https://youtu.be/hdU4TdHbw3c