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From Cult Observer, 1995, Volume 12, No. 2
Child Custody and Cults
Michael D. Langone, Ph.D.
The central question in a
custody dispute is: “What is in the best interests of the children?” Regarding
this question, I make the following assumptions about children’s needs.
When parental separation
occurs, contact with both parents is preferable, provided both parents are
loving and act responsibly toward their children.
Children need to feel secure
and their lives ought to be reasonably predictable.
Children need to feel
worthwhile, that is, esteemed in their own eyes, in their parents’ eyes, and the
eyes of their immediate community.
Children need to learn
interpersonal, intellectual, and practical skills that will prepare them for
independent living in the adult world.
Children’s parents should
have sufficient flexibility and understanding to adjust their expectations and
disciplinary methods according to the changing developmental needs of their
children.
Assumption One: Contact with Both Parents
Cultic groups tend to disrupt
family relationships and “demonize” those who disagree with or otherwise
threaten the group or its leadership. This tendency to disrupt family
relationships is a natural outgrowth of the isolationism, subjectivism, and
closed logical system of psychologically abusive groups. As exemplified in the
case of David Koresh, the group’s social and conceptual systems are structured
so as to prop up the leader’s typically exaggerated view of his/her importance.
Information from outside can threaten this fragile, closed system. When one
parent belongs to such a group and has custody over his/her children, a
nonmember parent who attempts to spend much time with the children can seriously
threaten the internal equilibrium of the group, which will, therefore, attempt
to keep the nonmember parent away.
This tendency to disrupt
family relationships can be exacerbated by the tendency of many such groups to
hold themselves above the law or to lie to those who seek contact with children
under the influence of the group.
Additionally, the tendency to
demonize critics of the group can be traumatic for children, who are likely to
feel torn between a member parent and a nonmember, demonized parent.
Assumption Two: The Need for Security and
Predictability
Cultic groups foster
unhealthy forms of dependency by focusing on submission and obedience to those
in authority. Such groups operate under a dynamic of deception, dependency, and
dread (the “DDD syndrome”) in order to win and maintain control over members.
Research studies, most notably the work of Dr. Paul Martin and associates,
demonstrate that psychologically abusive groups tend to create a state of
anxious dependency in their members. Such a state maximizes the leadership’s
capacity to control members in that members’ dependency on leadership reinforces
their isolation from outside sources of information while their anxiety
(typically stimulated in subtle ways by leadership) prevents them from becoming
complacent about their relationship to leadership. Hence, they are always
trying to please while never feeling that they measure up.
Such a state of affairs can
have serious consequences for children. First of all, the children are raised
in an environment in which dire threats (the “devil”) and regular criticism of
their failings make them feel insecure and dependent upon leadership for
whatever intermittent reinforcement leadership provides. Such an environment is
the opposite of what the psychological community would recommend for the rearing
of children.
A second detrimental
consequence of such psychologically abusive environments results from the
tendency for leadership to treat parents as “middle management” with regard to
their own children. Parents are seduced and/or pressured into relinquishing
primary responsibility for making decisions that impinge upon their children’s
welfare. Thus, educational decisions, disciplinary measures, medical decisions,
etc., will frequently issue from the group’s leader, directly or indirectly. If
the leader does not value children or subscribes to a belief in corporal
punishment, severe harm can be inflicted upon the children. There are many such
cases in the literature.
Parents’ becoming “middle
management” with regard to their own children is most detrimental when
leadership uses the children as pawns to test the loyalty of parents. Jim
Jones’s suicide drills (there were dozens of practice runs before the actual
suicide in Guyana) tested parents’ loyalty to him because they had to give their
children the poison. Although Jonestown is obviously an extreme example, the
extreme merely underlines the principle, which can be very destructive even in
much less extreme situations.
Assumption Three: Children Need to Feel
Worthwhile
The black/white attitudes of
cultic groups place children in a position of either submitting totally or
risking severe psychological, and sometimes physical, punishment. Neither of
these options—suppression of natural tendencies to test limits and assert
individuality vs. exposure to possibly severe and persistent punishments—is
conducive to the growth of self-esteem and a secure sense of belonging to a
caring community.
Black/white attitudes are
reinforced by the closed logical systems of such groups. Belief systems are
usually so structured that leadership is always right. If a group advocates
meditation or prayer to cure physical ills and a member who meditates or prays
remains sick, then the obvious conclusion leadership draws is that the member is
not meditating or praying enough, or not doing it correctly. Children raised in
such environments cannot develop confidence in themselves or their immediate
environment because they can be criticized even when they obey, for they are
obeying irrational belief systems that often have negative consequences in the
real world. But because the belief system by definition is unassailable, the
child will always be “wrong.”
Assumption Four: Learning Skills
It is almost self-evident
that groups that are isolationist, subjectivist, and logically closed will
hinder children’s attempts to learn the interpersonal, intellectual, and
practical skills that mainstream society puts so much effort into teaching
children. If reason is denigrated because reason threatens the irrational
beliefs of leadership, a child’s capacity to reason will be stunted. If the
outside world is viewed as evil, a child’s opportunity to interact with a
variety of people and to learn practical skills in the world will be restricted.
Assumption Five: Parental Flexibility
It is almost self-evident
that groups that are isolationist, subjectivist, and logically closed will
hinder children’s attempts to learn the interpersonal, intellectual, and
practical skills that mainstream society puts so much effort into teaching
children. If reason is denigrated because reason threatens the irrational
beliefs of leadership, a child’s capacity to reason will be stunted. If the
outside world is viewed as evil, a child’s opportunity to interact with a
variety of people and to learn practical skills in the world will be restricted.
The black/white attitudes, anxious dependency,
closed system of logic, and isolationism of psychologically abusive groups
demand rigidity, not flexibility. Moreover, the tendency to demonize those who
disagree or disobey will come into conflict with normal developmental changes
such as teenagers’ tendency to test limits by breaking rules. Parents of
adolescents must learn to let go of their control as their children learn to
behave independently and responsibly. Parents must be flexible; otherwise their
children will have much difficulty in learning how to become independent and
responsible. Psychologically abusive environments, because they foster
rigidity, make even more difficult a developmental stage that can be trying to
even the most flexible and understanding of parents. |
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Almendros, Carmen: "Book of Abstracts - Madrid 2005 Conferenced" Chambers, William, Ph.D. et al.: "The Group Psychological Abuse Scale" Chambers, William, Ph.D. et al.: "The Group Psychological Abuse Scale" - abs Conference 1997: PA Presenter Conference 2000 WA: Speakers Conference 2001 NJ: Speakers Conference 2002 FL: Events Conference 2003 CT: Agenda Conference 2004 AB: Draft Agenda Conference 2004 GA: Events Overview Conference 2005 Madrid: Agenda Conference 2006 CO: Conference Handbook with agenda, bios, & abstracts Conference 2007: Brussels Home - Bruxelles Page d'acceuil Conference 2008: Philadelphia home Conference 2009: Geneva, Switzerland home Dole, Arthur A., Ph.D.: "Is The New Age Movement Harmless? Critics Versus Experts" - abs Kropveld, Michael & Langone, Michael: "'Lost Love' in the Controversy surrounding 'Big Love'" Kropveld, Michael & Langone, Michael: "Perdus dans la controverse entourant la polygamie" Lalich, Janja & Langone, Michael: "Characteristics Associated with Cultic Groups - Revised" Langone, "Michael: Satanism & Occult-Related Violence" Langone, Micahel, Ph.D.: "Deception, Dependency & Dread The Conversion Process" Langone, Michael D., Ph.D. & Kropveld, Michael. "Introduction to the ICSA 2007 Annual Conference" Langone, Michael D., Ph.D. & Nieburg, Herbert, Ph.D.: "Treatment of Satanism" Langone, Michael D., Ph.D. - profile Langone, Michael D., Ph.D.: " Secular and Religious Critiques of Cults" Langone, Michael D., Ph.D.: "Cult Involvement: Suggestions for Concerned Parents and Professionals" - abstract Langone, Michael D., Ph.D.: "Cultism and American Culture" - abstract Langone, Michael D., Ph.D.: "Deprogramming: An Analysis of Parental Questionnaires" - abstract Langone, Michael D., Ph.D.: "International Cultic Studies Association, Cults, and Government" Langone, Michael D., Ph.D.: "Introduction" (to special issue on Cults, Evangelicals, and the Ethics of Social Influence) Langone, Michael D., Ph.D.: "Letter to a Former Member of a Meditation Group" Langone, Michael D., Ph.D.: "On Dialogue Between the Two Tribes of Cultic Studies Researchers" Langone, Michael D., Ph.D.: "Outline: Child Literature" Langone, Michael D., Ph.D.: "Pluralism, Deeds, Creeds, and Cults" Langone, Michael D., Ph.D.: "Psychological Abuse: Theoretical and Measurement Issues" Langone, Michael D., Ph.D.: "Reply to Xie" - Abstract Langone, Michael D., Ph.D.: "Responding to Jihadism: A Cultic Studies Perspective" Langone, Michael D., Ph.D.: "Social Influence: Ethical Considerations" - abstract Langone, Michael D., Ph.D.: "The Comet and Its Tail" Langone, Michael D., Ph.D.: "The PRC and Falun Gong" - abstract Langone, Michael D., Ph.D.: "The Two Camps of Cultic Studies" Langone, Michael D.: "Academic Disputes and Dialogue Collection: Preface" Langone, Michael Ph.D.: "Cults and Violence" Langone, Michael, D. Ph.D.& Chambers, William: "Outreach to Ex-Cult Members: The Question of Terminology" - abstract Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "An Investigation of a Reputedly Psychologically Abusive Group That Targets College Students Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Are “Sound” Theology and Cultism Mutually Exclusive? Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Boston Church of Christ Movement Study" Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Business and the New Age Movement: A Critical Perspective" Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Child Custody and Cults" Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Children and Cults -- excerpt from Recovery from Cults Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Clinical Update on Cults" Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Comment on 'Opus Dei Over Time'" Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Cult Awareness Groups and NRM Scholars: Toward Depolarization of Key Issues" - abstract Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Cultic Studies Bibliography 2003" Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Cults and Mind Control" Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Cults, Conversion, Science, & Harm Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Cults, Psychological Manipulation, and Society Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Cults: Questions and Answers" Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Definitional Ambiguity" Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Harm and NRMs: Introduction" - abstract Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Helping Families" Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Innter Experience and Conversion" - abstract Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Introduction to Contributions by Scheflin and karlin & Orne" Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Large Group Awareness Trainings" Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "New Religions and Public Policy" Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Prevalence" Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Psychological Abuse" - abstract Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Questionnaire Study: Preliminary Report" Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Reflections on Falun Gong and the Chinese Government" - abstract Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Reflections on Post-Cult Recovery Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Reflections on the Legion of Christ: 2003-2006" Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Research on Destructive Cults Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Satanism and Occult-Related Violence: What You Should Know" Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "The Cult Problem in Japan" Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "We weren't Crazy; We were Fooled" Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "What Is New Age? Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "What Should be Done about Cults? Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "What You Might Want To Know About ICC Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "Zealotry and the American Identity" Langone, Michael: "Deprogramming, Exit Counseling, and Ethics: Clarifying the Confusion" - Cult Observer 10(4), 1993 Langone, Michael: "History of the American Family Foundation" Langone, Michael: "Introduction to Special Collection on Recovery From Cults" - abstract Langone, Michael: "Recovery From Cults" Recovery From Cults - Book Review by Arthur A. Dole, Ph.D. Rosedale, Herbert and Langone, Michael, Ph.D.: "On Using the Term "Cult" Ryan, Patrick / Langone, Michael: "Religious Conflict Resolution: A Model for Families" Singer, Margaret, Ph.D. et al.: "Psychotherapy Cults" - abstract
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