#1

I went to college and they taught me about cults.
A quiet coastal town in Kenya was left reeling when police made a gruesome discovery in the Shakahola forest near the Indian Ocean in 2023: Mass shallow graves containing hundreds of bodies, including men, women and children.
All had died sometime between January 2021 and September 2023, after being led into the forest by a man they respected and trusted, Paul Nthenge Mackenzie.
It would later emerge that Mackenzie, a former taxi driver, had pivoted to become a self-proclaimed pastor. He had a history of extremism and a slew of previous legal cases against him.
The pastor/cult leader had originally encouraged his followers to move to the Shakahola forest in preparation for the end of the world. He had offered them parcels of land for under $100 to entice them. Mackenzie reportedly partitioned the forest into different areas and gave them biblical names like Judea, Bethlehem and Nazareth.
A court would later hear that the self-proclaimed pastor had ordered his followers to starve themselves and their children so that they could get to heaven faster. This, he said, was their golden ticket to "meet Jesus." It's been dubbed one of the worst cult disasters ever.
#2

In that moment, the cognitive dissonance finally broke through 33 years of indoctrination. Why would I want to be a member of a church with such a racist past? I couldn't think of a single reason that outweighed their WELL-DOCUMENTED history of white supremacy.
Dr. Steven Eichel is a forensic psychologist and renowned cult specialist. Bored Panda reached out to him to delve deeper into the underground world of cults and to find out how to spot them. "Most people have heard of religious cults, but there are political cults, therapy cults, marketing cults, and cults that blend all of these together," Eichel told us during an intriguing interview.
Interestingly, Eichel says that due to the confusion around the term "cult," most of experts in the field refer to these groups as "high-demand" or "high-control" groups. But in this article, we will stick to the term "cult."
The forensic psychologist added that cults vary tremendously in the content of their beliefs and rituals. "However, their processes are usually very similar and that's how we recognize cults. Not by their 'crazy' beliefs, but by how people are treated in the group, and by the psychosocial processes they use to recruit and keep members," said the expert.
He tells us that there are several "tell-tale" signs of a cult. Most are very secretive and will only allow certain information to be known by the recruit. Groups that alienate members from loved ones, families, and friends are another sign. "Lovebombing" (paying special attention to the new recruit, or even hinting at the possibility of romance and/or s*x) is an indicator, he adds.
"Personal growth or therapy cults often make recruits sign NDA and other nondisclosure documents, or make you promise to never reveal the group's 'special' techniques or beliefs," reveals Eichel. "In the worst cases, like NXIVM and Scientology, they collect 'collateral' (information that, if revealed, would cause harm to the person) to ensure that you do not violate their rules about nondisclosure."
#3

Interesting answer, I supposed. But klaxon alarms started going off in my head. “Are you saying it is a sin to ask questions?”
“It can be, yes.”
That was the first real crack in the dam. It desconstructed not long after.
Eichel adds that asking for unusual donations of money and/or time can be a sign. "Most cults are apocalyptic in some way," says the specialist. "Time is always of the essence. So pressure to join or take classes or whatever 'as soon as possible!' is often present."
Unfortunately, many cult member don't realize this until it's too late, says Eichel, but there are usual "exit costs" that are eventually made known to the member. "That is, if they leave, all kinds of terrible things will happen to them (and/or loved ones)," he explained.
"In the Unification Church, leaving not only condemns you to hell, but also condemns all your ancestors and the souls of all your future progeny," Eichel told Bored Panda. "Compare this to the average 'mainstream' political group or church. If you leave the church, you may get a few calls or a visit from the pastor, but it is unlikely you will be told your life is now doomed for eternity."
#4

#5

i could tell she didn’t mean to phrase it that way, but she didn’t correct herself either. i was pissed though. i should be ALLOWED to ask whatever g*****n questions i want (and i expect you to have an answer of SOME kind), and if you don’t think i should be questioning something, i’m going to question everything. f**k you.
Eichel told Bored Panda that individuals vary tremendously with regard to how they respond to cultic influence. He says there are two broad categories of cult members, and they differ tremendously from each other.
Adults who are recruited into cults are known as "First Generation Adult" members or FGA for short. "Their lives and experiences are radically different from those who are born into cultic groups: Second Generation or Multiple Generation Adults (SGAs/MGAs)," he explains.
The expert says that coming out of a cult you were born into, that your family is in, is a very different process (and generally much more difficult) than it is for an adult who is recruited into a cult in college and then wants to leave 10 years later.
"The SGA will have a much more difficult time," the cult specialist tells us. "For example, one MGA left his cult at 18 and went to community college. In college, he was shamed for not knowing who Madonna was, or what rap and hip-hop are. He had no idea what Star Wars or Star Trek were about. He had never celebrated Christmas let alone 'demonic' holidays like Halloween. And, of course, he had no idea how to relate to college women."
#6

We asked Eichel to elaborate a bit more on how someone can recognize a cult. "The typical signs of a cultic group are: a highly charismatic leader, often with 'special' (e.g., divine) characteristics or abilities. In some cults, the leader is literally thought to be a god, or God," he revealed. "Cultic groups typically demand excessive commitments of time and money. They engage in intensive 'education' classes (sometimes disguised as 'Bible study') that are basically indoctrination classes."
The expert adds that cultic groups will tell you to avoid any information or informational venue that is critical of the group... and especially warn you not to talk to "apostates" that have left!
"Many cults cause estrangement or even total alienation from families of origin," he says. "They are deceptive in not being transparent about agendas, finances, the amount of coercion or control involved (e.g., you now have to give up your romantic and/or s*x life and only marry someone approved by the cult)."
Eichel cautions that any group that says it has the absolute and universal truth—whether that "truth" be evangelical Christianity, Wahabi Islam, or Revolutionary Marxism—should be suspect.
#7

A few semesters in, I got curious regarding the claims of its founder. I wanted more details, wanted to read his own accounts of his experiences, unfiltered through the church's summaries. So off I went to the university library.
Unfortunately, the more I researched, the more cracks I found in his claims, in his life, in church history... until I realized he had been nothing but a con man, a liar, and the foundation of the church was rotten. As I kept looking, I also realized that everything above the foundation was rotten as well. It was all lies.
Finding this out broke my heart. Everything I had learned, everything that was expected of me in this life and the next was nothing but dust. American-Victorian dust. I couldn't put Humpty Dumpty back together again, and I couldn't spend my life pretending it was true.
And that's how I came to know that I had to leave the Mormon church. I couldn't do it that very moment. I had to disentangle my life and my psyche from the church, and that took a lot of years. Finding out the church isn't true was beginning a journey to recover from years of deceit and betrayal.
I wanted so desperately for it all to be true. But it's not, and the moment I found that out while sitting at a table in the Harold B. Lee Library at BYU, surrounded by books pulled from that very library's shelves, was the moment I knew I was a member of a cult.
If you put a list in front of you of the things that define a cult, the Mormon Church ticks every one of them.
#8

Where the hell does it say that?!
Also he is a bigot so… empathy is a sin to him.
According to a review article published in the Journal of Forensic Psychology, people join cults for many different reasons. "Some join a group because of the benefits that it seems to offer them, while others do so in order to fill in an existing gap, whether it pertains to family, friends or lack of resources," reads the paper. "Whereas anyone could find themselves attracted to cults, their beliefs and teachings, individuals in transitional states of their lives were found to be the most vulnerable."
Fathima Badurdeen is a sociologist and expert on the history of religious extremism in Kenya’s coastal region. She says that many of Mackenzie's followers would have been unfazed by his bizarre demands.
They come from an area where poverty, unemployment and substance use are rampant, she explained. Many were desperate to escape their circumstances. "This charismatic preacher had filled a void for them,” Badurdeen told a reporter.
#9

Then my parents did something very illegal. They scammed money from other relatives that needed it for medication. This resulted in the death of my uncle who died in my house. I went to the JWs for help. I got a meeting with elders.
They told me to forget about it and that I'd find peace joining them.
The research paper notes that cults use different psychological techniques to gain control over the identity of the new member, create confusion, and create a new cult pseudo-personality. "Although not all cults are destructive in nature, research shows that the majority of individuals who leave such groups experience psychological challenges associated with integration into society."
We asked Eichel what steps someone can take to safely leave a cult... "Support, support, support!" stressed the expert. "Connect with people who will support your right to think independently, to have doubts, to question. Find an ex-member group online (there are literally hundreds). Attend an ICSA meeting or conference. If possible, hire an 'exit counselor or engage a therapist who is cult-aware (sadly, a small number)."
#10

That’s when I decided I do not want to be part of that.
To be fair, I was never really inside the cult. But this part made sure that I immediately lost my interest for ever becoming part of that cult.
#11

Eichel adds that anyone leaving a cult is likely to need a lot of help after exiting. But the the amount can vary depending on whether they are First Generation Adults or SGAs/MGAs.
"The latter generally need far more intensive assistance," the expert said. "Money is almost always an issue... cults typically demand all or most financial resources be turned over to the group. Very few SGAs/MGAs leave with anything close to enough money to live on."
On top of this, many do not have marketable skills, says Eichel. "One of my former patients, who had been a Scientologist from his teen years into his forties, asked me 'What do I put down on a resume? That I'm good at fundraising and bilking people of their money? That's the only employment I ever had.' So in general, the support they need is: financial, social, and therapeutic."
#12

#13

The former "mentor" convinced me to go off of my antidepressants. I felt horrible and had daily s*****e ideations. In the next session, I told her that I'm going back on them, and she responded with, "They block you from your higher self."
I shortly left that place. F**k her and her toxic b******t. It fractured my identity and had to reclaim myself.
Eichel told Bored Panda the most important message he tries to convey is, "Do not only look at how the group presents itself (Oh! What pretty colors that Hindu cult uses in their ceremonies! And those Scientologists were so helpful during 9/11!), or even the beliefs. Rather, look at the PROCESSES it uses to recruit, influence, and control."
The expert says that learning about cults is really about learning about influence and relationships. "In courtrooms, I discuss the 'cultic relationship' rather than sticking only to discussing the cult, because members are taught to actively brainwash themselves, even when not in the presence of their leader or group," Eichel reveals.
#14

#15

Thought I just grew up normal Christian, but no, I grew up in a hard-core f****d up Evangelical church. Turns out that's not normal Christianity.
"Members are not 'passive zombies' as they were often described in the 1970s and 1980s," Eichel said, adding that there's significant research suggesting that the same psychological processes—deception, manipulation, and coercive control—are present in relationships marked by domestic or intimate partner abuse. "And most importantly, in many gangs and in human trafficking."
Despite all of this, it is possible to get out, as many of the brave people on this list have proven.
#16

And then when I pushed back I was told I needed to just have faith these same horrible prophets had been called of God and then was given terrible excuses for why they taught such obviously immoral and unethical things.
Being raised from birth in the Mormon cult I could excuse a lot of things, but some things were just so obviously horrible that I could not.
Then I learned later that using prayer as an objective truth finding system is a lie and does not work, and I was completely out, since those 'spiritual witnesses' were all that was keeping me in at that point.
#17

#18
#19

> "This is the only true and living church upon the face of the whole earth, with which I, the Lord, am well pleased."
—Doctrine & Covenants 1:30
This was often shortened to "our church is the only one true church."
This was in the late '80s, and I was around 8 years old. Even at that age, I thought their claim was just too over the top.
Now my former cult says things like "Doubt your doubts before you doubt your faith" (Dieter F. Uchtdorf, October 2013) and "Only read approved church sources."
I had to wait until I was 18 to escape. My entire family is still drinking the Kool-Aid.
#20



