Ex-Scientologist Interview

by GetBusyLiving 9 Replies latest jw friends

  • GetBusyLiving
    GetBusyLiving

    This is an interview I just read of an ex-member of the church of Scientology. There are a ton of them over at the site I read this on, but this one in particular really struck me because of the parallels I noticed between the CoS and the JW's. Pretty heart-wrenching stuff.
    http://alley.ethercat.com/cgi-bin/door/door.cgi?3
    1. How did you first become acquainted with the Church of Scientology?
    I was born and raised within Scientology.
    2. What initially appealed to you about scientology?
    In my case, since I was born and raised within this cult it was never a matter of what appealed to me. I was socialized to regard it as the only way to be and I was told again and again how chaotic and dangerous the outside world was. I wanted to help people and I was told this was the only thing that could help.
    3. Were there problems in your life that you thought scientology would address?
    Since I was so young at the time there were no personal problems that I had to address.
    4. Did you see, experience, or hear about things that didn't seem right while you were in the Church of Scientology? What were they, and what convinced you to set aside your feelings?
    I noticed so many things that “were not quite right” that I could write a book. I will list a few of them here, but believe me each one that is listed I could write a chapter about.

    - My parents spent thousands of dollars and many evening/ weekends on Scientology, all the while neglecting their children’s needs to some degree or another.
    - There were at least three times that I know of that my mom spent large sums of money on Scientology without my dad’s consent, this was advocated by the church as the “greatest good for the greatest number of dynamics”
    - I was recruited at age 15 to join the Sea Org. My teenage years were stolen from me and I was not able to finish my high school degree.
    - The three years that I was in the Sea Org I endured low living standards and little to no pay. I lived with 5-8 other girls at all times in a one room studio. I was told that my living expenses and needs would be taken care of but when it came to getting a dresser, there were none to be found, when it came to getting uniform parts I mainly got used and raggedy pieces issued to me and when it came to get paid the $50 a week as was promised I usually only saw between $10-20 which is not even enough to buy tampons and shampoo. One time there was a huge push from management to sell a lecture series and staff were expected to give up the few dollars they made a week to buy these LRH lectures. Through peer pressure many people did.
    - Each time I wanted to leave the Sea Org I was called names, threatened and humiliated on a daily basis. I was not allowed to tell my parents that I was thinking of leaving and get some parental advice. The one time that I did I was told I violated a policy called “Leaving and Leaves” and that I was going to be declared a suppressive person. Actually, I wasn’t just “told” I was going to be declared. I was backed up against the wall while someone was screaming at the top of his lungs that he was “going to fucking declare me.” The consequence of being labeled a suppressive person within the church are huge, I would no longer be able to have any contact with any Scientologist. Being born and raised within Scientology this would create a huge problem for me and my family.
    - When I finally left I was strapped with a $10,000 bill at age 18 from services I did while in the Sea Org. My bill was considered low by other ex- Sea Org members I knew who had to pay anywhere from $30,000 to $80,000!
    - At age 15 I was flown to a class V church (a non-Sea Org church) to be an “executive.” As I was to be an “executive” I was not allowed to befriend anyone at the church and get help. The Sea Org and the church I was working for did not pay for my basic expenses such a room and board. I was 15 and not allowed to tell my parents I was broke and living off of eggs and bread. No one looked out for my interests as a minor.
    - My parents got divorced because the church convinced my mom to sign a staff contract and leave my dad.
    - The church has sent my mom to get “training” for months on end, never once did she come home completed with her training. At one time she was in LA for this training for 6 months, when I talked to her through out this time she told me that all she was doing was waiting for materials to arrive and they wouldn’t let her go home before she was done. She used her credit card at this time to pay for her room and board, something the church says it will pay for. She is now over $30,000 in credit card debt because of Scientology.
    - Scientology broke my family apart. First with my parents and now my mom and I. We can no longer have a conversation because all she can talk about is Scientology.
    5. Why did you choose to stay in the Church of Scientology?
    In so many ways I didn’t have choice. It was all I knew, my parents and all my friends were Scientologist. I thought I would be lost with out it and that even though there were many things I disagreed with it was the ONLY way to improve my life. Since I was raised in Scientology it was pounded in to me at an early age that Scientology has all the answers and I cannot question the validity of them because they were already “proved” to me. I was assured that anything I did not agree with was because of my misunderstood words or low case level.
    6. Were you staff or public? If staff, was it at a mission or an org? Were you ever in the Sea Org or OSA? Which unit? If not on staff, did you ever volunteer to 'help out'?
    I was public and then staff. I don’t wish to disclose where.
    7. Why did you leave the Church of Scientology? Was there a "final straw"?
    I can’t say there was a final straw. Slowly truth was uncovered to me and I saw that I was lied to, that it wasn’t just me having these problems with the church, but that there were people just like me all around the world. I have to say that it helped to have a wonderful friend who loved me and made me feel special just because I was who I was, not because I was a statistic or a production machine
    8. Do you think the Church of Scientology needs to change some of its practices? If so, what should be changed? How did those practices affect your life?
    I don’t think it should change anything, I hope it continues its sick practices of exploitation, deception and coercion until people get outraged enough to shut it down for good.
    9. If the items you listed in the previous question were changed, would you consider rejoining or staying in the Church of Scientology? If so, why?
    I will never join the Church of Scientology again. It is heartbreaking to know that there are so many good people within the church that truly and honestly want to help people, but I still don’t think the church could be changed enough to be resemble a constructive group
    10. Any additional comments you would like to make?
    I want to applaud any Scientologist or ex-Scientologist who is researching Scientology on the Internet. I know we have been trained not to do this, but thank you for thinking for yourself and doing it anyway
  • BabaYaga
    BabaYaga

    Dear gods, yes I have been convinced for a while now that Scientologists had it far worse than even we as JW's did. What is the link to that site, please, GetBusy?

    Baba

    edited to say, Oh, fooey! I see the link now, thank you!

  • LeslieV
    LeslieV

    I think that Scientology is kissing cousins of JW's. Same tactics in many ways. JW's are just more insidious then Scientologist is all. JMO

    Leslie

  • DanTheMan
    DanTheMan

    LeslieV I would say that JWism is kid's stuff next to the Hubbard cult. But I think that JWism is headed in a very Scientology direction with their increasing irrationality and their pit-bull lawyer squad.

    One time there was a huge push from management to sell a lecture series and staff were expected to give up the few dollars they made a week to buy these LRH lectures. Through peer pressure many people did.

    Cult apologists often play the "nobody forces them to do it" card, and to a degree it's a valid defense. But coercion is more complex than having a gun held to your head.

  • greendawn
    greendawn

    The scientologists are in fact a lot more aggressive than the JWs there are cults out there that are worse than the dubs. However their more harmless appearence may help to entice people in, those that wouldn't fall for an obviously wayward cult.

  • thecarpenter
    thecarpenter

    and that I was going to be declared a suppressive person

    Sounds a lot like being disfellowshipped. I am going to use this expression with the Jdubs that witness to me.

  • New Worldly Translation
    New Worldly Translation

    Very interesting post GBL.

    One positive about scientology being so far out is that people are less inclined to join. Unlike JW's who entice people in with big promises and then trap them in with fear. The estimate for scientology members is 100k to 500k worldwide. Of course that's no comfort for those trying to escape from it.
    I applauded the comment that scientology couldn't change anything to become an acceptable rational organisation and it should keep preaching the same doctrine so members can realize it's a crock of shit.

  • jaguarbass
    jaguarbass

    It seems some of them went down similar paths to us JW's. Life is like a maze we are all looking for that piece of cheese at the end.

  • LeslieV
    LeslieV

    Dan I would have to say that is why I said that JW's are more insidious. They look more mainstream then Scientologist and other cults, but once you are in the religion the tactics are similiar. JMO

    Leslie

  • Crumpet
    Crumpet

    If ever doubted the Jws were a cult i dont now! The similarities are quite remarkable. Put this interview side by side with newboy's bethel stories and there are some glaring similarities in terms of using believers as a steady resource of unpaid slaves.

    When I think that I try to avoid buying clothes from slave labour countries and always try to buy Fair Trade and yet I supported the JWs all those years and they were no better.

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