I wanted to resurrect this thread after a phone conversation with a JW family member today.
Their circuit assembly is this weekend, but they did not attend today's session. I didn't ask why he didn't go, but he initiated the conversation with a list of reasons why he wasn't up to going. It wasn't just the reasons themselves, but it was his tone of voice when he listed them, that got me thinking. By the tone of his voice, you would think that he had been diagnosed with a serious illness. A mixture of seriousness, regret, and perhaps a bit of self-pity. I could picture the complete lack of eye contact that always goes with this type of conversation.
All the while I was thinking, "Just say you didn't feel like going! Or just say you didn't feel up to traveling two hours each way in terrible traffic to a city that is stressful for you to visit on a good day, let alone for this two-day session full of made-up bullshit about made-up bullshit."
Would it be that hard to admit that you don't want to go?
Actually, yes, it would.
I remember those days. Any reason to stay home from a meeting was carefully weighed - would it sound legitimate to others? Because the real issue with missing a meeting is not about you missing out on something good. It's about people noticing that you missed the meeting.
As this family member rattled off his very legitimate-sounding reasons for missing an assembly day, I started reflecting upon the ability of cults to instill self-censoring and guilt mechanisms into their members, and it struck me that peer pressure is just as effective - maybe more so - in these situations. Why the need to explain himself? I haven't been an active JW in over 18 months. But I remember the guilt, and I remember the disapproval of others.
The Watchtower can and does set up the situation without ever explicitly stating, "You should feel guilty for not being at the meeting." Making statements that equate love for God and appreciation for his provisions with meeting attendance, for starters. Relating stories about people who crawled naked through volcanoes three times a week just to be at the meetings is another.
Really, they know that they only have to put out these few suggestive statements, and if your own Watchtower-trained conscience doesn't make you feel like dirt, the more judgmental and self-righteous members of the congregation will take it from there.