musical74 Wrote:Googling "what to do when a friend joins a cult" gave a bunch of resources, I think http://www.cultwatch.com/how-to-help-fr ... amily.html is a good start. I'm an amateur psychologist so this kind of thing is of interest to me, helping people...but making sure it's NOT a cult!
Zeus Kabob Wrote:Sounds like something bad happened and you're having to think hard about the circumstances.
My advice to you (and to everyone reading this) is to think about what to do next time. In the future, if a friend became interested in a cult, or any other social group that would cut them off from you and potentially the rest of the world, think about what you should consider. Does this change have the potential to seriously harm them or impact their future? Does their presence in your life matter a lot to you? What should you say to them to show that you care about them and have concerns about this, without it coming across as a knee-jerk reaction?
TheWrongHands, think about what you might do next time in this sort of situation, and how you could better maintain relationships that matter to you.
Personally, I'm having trouble deciding what I'd do if a close friend became interested in a cult. I think I'd try to reach out and show them the people they'd be leaving behind, to hopefully convince them that they're trading too much for this new social situation.
Ynsano Wrote:There is a way to see if someone else in this forum still talks to them... but that requires you to post they nicks... idk.. is your choice but i believe you choose not to post the nicks... respect privacy and such...
AcetheSuperVillain Wrote:The way I see it, if this friend is really your friend, you have to respect your friend's freedom. It's not ethical or practical to have complete control over who someone else can talk to, or what they can like or what they believe or how they think. If you're worried whether or not you've made the right decisions, infringing on someone else's freedom wouldn't have been the right thing to do either. "It takes a village to raise a child" and we all rely on our "villages" for our entire lives. You can't be expected to be the sole person who stops this friend from making self-destructive decisions.
Plus, you mentioned that you valued your friendship, but then the other person did not. It's a common thing for human beings to create expectations of people in our minds, and ultimately it's impossible to ever actually know what someone else is truly thinking, so we when we form a relationship with someone, we form a relationship with our expectation of the person instead of with the person themself. This is a much, much less serious example than joining cults, but for example, my father loves to cook, and has this expectation that every time he cooks something his loving family will shower him with praise. But lately, he cooked a kale soup, and I've taken every opportunity to express my deep dislike for kale in the past, but he makes this kale soup and is offended when I taste a bit and go find something else to eat because "he made that soup for me". When I remind him again that I don't like kale and have never liked kale, he just says "I didn't know you don't like kale". Maybe I somehow wasn't forceful enough, but the point is, if he had actually made soup "for me" he wouldn't have put kale in it. He made soup for the expectation of me, an imaginary friend version of me.
So not knowing anything about you or your friend or how well you knew one another and just that this is human nature, it might just be that your expectation of your friend simply didn't match up with the real person. And it wouldn't be the first time someone made that mistake, just watch a god damned sitcom for examples.
AcetheSuperVillain Wrote:I mean, I don't know, it all depends on what exactly this cult tried to force your buddy into, but I'm a Neo-Pagan conspiracity theorist who makes furry porn, there are a lot of people in the world who would accuse me of making the wrong choices or people who think they've failed me for me to end up this way. But I don't consider my beliefs or morals to be wrong or harmful, I don't consider my life to be a failure, I'm pretty happy with who I am and I think the world would be better off with more people like me in it. So sure, I know that there are cults out there that I would consider "bad" and harmful or at least selfish, and cutting off communication with outsiders raises some alarm, but without knowing more about what this cult actually believes, all I can do is put myself in your buddy's shoes and think about how I wouldn't want other people tell me I'm stupid for believing something different.
AcetheSuperVillain Wrote:Well, for the benefit of whoever's listening, that kind of thing is exactly why I'm not christian anymore. I can't trust a religion that feels the need to snuff out anything that raises a hint of doubt about their beliefs. I grew up in a household where we weren't allowed to play video games or watch captain planet because they were the devil's work. Then one day I read a quote by the dalai lama saying "If science proves some belief of Buddhism wrong, then Buddhism will have to change. In my view, science and Buddhism share a search for the truth and for understanding reality." That blew me away. Still does. And then there's a quote by odin in the havamal that says "no one is so good that they are without fault, and no one is so wicked that they count for nothing." That whole concept seemed right, but so outrageous to me, and even more so that gods and holy men were saying them.
And when you demonize your opponents, you get stuck with the devil yourself. Look at Alabama. They're so rigidly republican that they almost elected a child molester to the senate, because somehow slightly less than half of voting Alabamans thought that a child molester was still better than a democrat. There's nothing wrong with being skeptical about your beliefs, religious, ideological, or otherwise. It's healthy. It's how you protect yourself from charlatans who would use your beliefs against you. It's how you reach the truth, the real truth, the deep truth. When a mechanic doubts his engine and inspects it, that process makes the engine stronger, and so should inspecting your beliefs lead to stronger beliefs. You should never be afraid to question your beliefs, but you should always be afraid of people who say you shouldn't question your beliefs.
Hopefully your friend found this cult because they are in the process of seeking the truth, and hopefully they will keep seeking the truth until they can sense your friendship again.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users