I started another thread to continue this topic....
Just wondering ... why a new thread?
the term "brainwashing" is sometimes thrown around this forum and i thought i'd briefly comment on it.
the idea that a group or person can actually make you think, act and feel in a certain way is highly dubious.
i'm not saying it's impossible, but i highly doubt that any ex-jws have ever experienced "brainwashing.
I started another thread to continue this topic....
Just wondering ... why a new thread?
i must say, i feel pretty proud of these little songs i just wrote, feel free to share them and spread 'em around!!
to the tune of ?santa claus is coming to town?
you better watch out, you better look out you better behave, and i?m telling you why the overseer is coming to town
When we were kids, my sister and I made up new words to "Here comes Santa Claus". It started out ...
"Here comes Armageddon, here comes armageddon
Right down Jehovah God's lane.
Satan the devil and his demons
Will soon be locked away."
I don't remember the rest exactly, but that is probably a blessing! I do remember it went into how wonderful paradise would be! What stupid little kids we were!
No ...wait. SHE'S still stupid! (in that respect). She probably still sings it! LOL!
the term "brainwashing" is sometimes thrown around this forum and i thought i'd briefly comment on it.
the idea that a group or person can actually make you think, act and feel in a certain way is highly dubious.
i'm not saying it's impossible, but i highly doubt that any ex-jws have ever experienced "brainwashing.
On the subject of brainwashing ... here is a recent article from The Times Higher Education Supplement. Sorry, it is rather long, but I would rather post it in its entirety than selectly paste certain sections. I highlighted a few sections that I think are especially applicable to the witnesses, though I know there are others.
November 26, 2004
SECTION: No.1668; Pg.18
LENGTH: 1493 words
HEADLINE: So, Do You Know Who Is Pulling Your Strings?
BYLINE: Kathleen Taylor
Brainwashing is not just the stuff of B-movies and cults, it is a real threat, says Kathleen Taylor.
What do you think of when you hear the word "brainwashing"? B-movies? Newspaper stories of cults? The Manchurian Candidate (the 1962 original film or the remake, released in the UK last week)? All of these depict brainwashing as a mysterious torture, the ultimate control fantasy: victims think that they are acting freely, yet someone else is pulling the strings. As well as being a useful plot device, this "brainwashing" veils our ignorance, providing a label that sounds like an explanation. Most of all, however, it taps into one of our deepest terrors: the fear of losing control of ourselves, of being manipulated by malevolent others.
It is this fear that gives brainwashing its impact and ensures that it resurfaces whenever we need an explanation for certain peculiarly abhorrent human actions. The word was widely used in the 1950s and early 1960s. It resurfaced in the late 1960s as the Manson family dominated the headlines, was evoked in the mid-1970s by heiress-turned-terrorist Patty Hearst and in 1978 after the mass murder suicide in the supposedly utopian community of Jonestown. More recently, there have been cults - and, of course, 9/11. In all these cases, the general feeling is that something strange must have happened to make healthy people commit such terrible and self-destructive atrocities.
What happened was certainly strange. But it was not the evil magic depicted in movies. No switches flipped to activate a brain implant, no neurosurgical procedures mangled people's neurons. Instead, mind manipulators such as Charles Manson and Jim Jones used increasingly well-understood psychological processes to achieve extreme versions of an everyday occurrence. We influence each other's minds all the time. We transmit our beliefs in language and reinforce the words with gestures and body language. Most of these attempts at influencing others' actions and thoughts are brief and don't involve coercion, even when the emotional temperature rises. They are also explicit and consensual. The target is well aware that someone is trying to change his or her mind and can accept or reject the proposed belief.
Sometimes, however, social influences are less transparent. Consider advertising and the media. The adverts that make up so much of the noise we now live in are, of course, honest about their intentions: they want to sell products. But they also transmit deeper messages that reinforce beliefs you may not have even realised you hold. People in adverts are rarely disabled, elderly, gay, overweight or unattractive; they have kitchens to die for and they never pick their noses. They show us that money brings happiness and that certain body shapes, families, behaviours and even ages are valued over others. The same is true of the assumptions that frame our news stories. Sick or dead children are innocents. Science is all about breakthroughs. Terrorists are irrational, and they can strike anywhere, any time, while being predictable enough for our leaders to be able to defeat them - whatever "defeat" means. This is not the real world as we know it, and people who take their knowledge uncritically from these sources tend to have correspondingly unrealistic views.
But deceit is not the only way to influence someone's beliefs. Sometimes the emotional temperature soars so high that we can no longer hang on to our ability to make rational decisions. Or the influencer may simply refuse to take no for an answer. Sometimes that person can control a victim's world to such an extent that isolation, repetition, emotional overload and physical abuse can be used to break down their resistance. These are the extreme cases we think of as "classic" brainwashing.
As with less brutal forms of social influence, brainwashing's ultimate aim is to change a person's beliefs. The technique is a simple one: control the messages that reach the target's brain. Every form of belief manipulation relies on this approach, and on three vital features of human brains.
First, brains get their beliefs from the world around them and construct a model of that world by merging the information available at any given time with the information they have stored in memory. Second, beliefs are represented in the patterns of connections between brain cells, cells that are activated when signals reach them from other cells, from the body (providing the signals we call emotions), or from the external world.
Third, these connections change their strength - the ease with which they allow information to flow from one cell to another - depending on how often those neurons have been active in the past. So beliefs we don't care much about or don't think about often tend to fade, while beliefs that we give a lot of time to, or that matter to us, tend to get stronger.
This is why isolation, repetition, emotional overload and physical abuse are used in brainwashing. Isolation reduces the variety of competing information sources that might activate conflicting beliefs and thereby weaken the attempt at influencing thought patterns: cult members tend not to read newspapers or talk to people with alternative points of view.
Repetition reactivates the same old circuits time and again, boosting beliefs by strengthening neural connections. (And repetition can be a seriously potent weapon: in cults, for instance, a leader may lecture his followers for hours at a time, interspersing this with discussion groups, self-criticism sessions and so on, so that the same messages are reiterated almost continuously, bar sleep, for weeks or months on end.) Emotional overload floods the brain with stress signals, drowning out the voices of memory that might otherwise object to the new dogma. Stress is also unpleasant, demanding action to relieve it - any action, even if that means renouncing one's previous existence. Brainwashers always give their victims a clear escape route: "accept my message". Finally, physical abuse, including inadequate diet and sleep deprivation, saps the energies that we need to think straight. Even in normal circumstances, consciously reflecting on the messages we receive is hard work, which is why we often don't bother. After all, the brain evolved to be lazy. Lazy, stereotypical thinking saves time and effort and leads to faster actions - that may save one's life in a crisis. Selection pressures on early Homo sapiens were concerned with the species' survival, not its susceptibility to thought control.
These days, however, we sophisticated Westerners are less concerned with predation and reproduction. Most of us, fortunately, will never get entangled in a cult, fall for a terrorist or end up in Guantanamo Bay. But we can and do succumb to less coercive tactics, as the recent US election's focus on terrorism showed. Campaign coverage rehearsed the threat of militant Islamism while telling US voters very little about it, isolating them from other information sources and leaving them as ignorant of their new enemy as they were of its Soviet predecessor. George W. Bush's simple campaign message ("be afraid; I'll save you") evoked the very fear it purported to soothe. It was endlessly repeated (campaign spending on advertising was about $ 3.9 billion or Pounds 2.1 billion). Critics who played down the terrorist threat were ignored; relevant issues such as the economy were marginalised. Uneasy voters chose the clearest, easiest message and why not? That's what brains evolved to do.
Resisting this kind of manipulation is possible. But, like brainwashing itself, it takes serious effort. Media literacy - ensuring access to several genuinely independent sources of information, preventing excessive message repetition, training people to notice emotional manipulation - certainly helps. But busy, stressed and weary people, accustomed to ignorance and heavily reliant on a tiny clique of leaders for their world-view, may not have the time and motivation to challenge their sources or search the internet for new ones. Our leaders, who gain much of their power from controlling information, have little interest in sharing that power, as the sorry tale of Labour's manifesto commitments on freedom of information shows. Even our universities, traditionally centres of free thought, seem less hospitable to different views these days. Yet we still have traditions of intellectual tolerance, scepticism, liberal freedoms and a respect for teaching people to think for themselves. Those traditions are our strongest defence against brainwashing. We must make sure, in our newly threatened world, that they are kept alive.
Kathleen Taylor is a research scientist in the physiology department, Oxford University. Her book Brainwashing: The Science of Thought Control is published this week by Oxford University Press, price Pounds 18.99.
It seems the only technique that witnesses do not use (or endorse) is physical abuse, and that is debatable. Anyone ever been "disciplined" as a child for refusing to attend a meeting or participate in some other witness activity? I know they might seem like extreme cases, and maybe they are. My point is that witnesses do use brainwashing techniques. The question is ... to what extent do they use them?
the term "brainwashing" is sometimes thrown around this forum and i thought i'd briefly comment on it.
the idea that a group or person can actually make you think, act and feel in a certain way is highly dubious.
i'm not saying it's impossible, but i highly doubt that any ex-jws have ever experienced "brainwashing.
logansrun,
I don't know anything about you and I am wondering if you were raised as a witness. I would guess you were not. We are probably playing with semantics here, but I do believe the witnesses brainwash their children. They are brought up in an altenate reality and will continue to believe that there is no other alternative until their reality is challenged. That is how the process of leaving begins.
Perhaps it might be more appropriate to say that they gain adult converts through "coersive measures" instead of brainwashing. Perhaps the proper term to apply to the process of adults becoming witnesses is "indoctrination", but not children. There are two entirely different processes that happen. Adult converts are persuaded, won over, drawn into "the fold", and indoctrinated. Witness children are not. I was not "taught" the truth as a child, I lived it. I was not persuaded to go to the meeting, etc., I was forced to go. The stimulus/response cycle is used from birth. Children are very moldable and impressionable. The stimulus/response technique works very well with them!
The theory of behaviorism is not that outdated. The problem with the stimulus/response approach is that without continual reinforcement, the learned belief/behavior has a greater possibility of failing. I think the society has done rather well at developing a stimulus/response system. Witnesses are reinforced a minimum of three times a week. The more they are reinforced, the more permanent the beliefs become.
There are current theories that believe that if you are presented with something enough times, your brain becomes "hardwired" that way. Your brain actually creates a new neural pathway when something is learned. Eventually, those pathways become permanent, and sometimes it is quite a challege to undo those pathways. So, I think it is incorrect when you say the organization cannot biological get inside your head. In this way, they can.
well here it is folks i am finally published.
i found out wed i had a poem and a photograph published in park universities the scribe.
which is cool since i don't even go there yet, it was quite and honor.
Wow, Sheila! That is quite an accomplishment! Congratulations to you both! I had something published once in a college journal back in Texas. I didn't think it was such a big deal and so I never got a copy of it! How stupid was that!
By the way, glad to see you posting again!
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-----------someone was going to an assembly to picket, and asked you to write an slogan which would really make a witness think or question what would you write?
What really is the Truth?
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hmm.... http://www.freakypixel.com/service_year.
http://www.cpfsoftware.com
wonder how many times they had to visit our site and then go directly to their own site to test that their little apostate filter was working?
They also fixed their little Greenland mistake! Glad to help 'em out!
my brother has *gasp* a worldy girlfriend.
he has a job, they both work there, met there, and now they are in love.
i think they have been together only a couple weeks.
What a tragedy! If only your parents could see how kicking him out makes things so much worse! In effect, they would be encouraging them to "shack up" and advance their relationship a lot faster than it would otherwise. They have only been dating for two weeks! If your parents were to simply respectfully disagree, there is no telling if they would even be together in another 2 weeks, or 4 weeks, etc. and your brother could still be living at home.
If I were you, I would not let the girl friend stay with you. I think they both still have a lot of growing up to do. I also do not think I would advertise to your brother too much that he may stay with you either. I know you will take him in when the time comes, but it may encourage your brother to speed things up a bit on getting himself kicked out. (It sounds like that my be what he wanted in the first place by telling your mom.)
I understand why he is so eagar to leave his JW home environment, but it sounds like he is not quite financially ready to conquer the world on his own yet. Unfortunately, it is inevitable that he will lose the support of your parents by , but somehow I think money and maturity makes it a lot easier to leave.
Good luck!
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hmm.... http://www.freakypixel.com/service_year.
http://www.cpfsoftware.com
Go to the new map and check out how many congregations Greenland has! 34,251 for only 141 publishers??? Bad data!!
Also, if you click on the old map, there is nice greeting to everyone ... "Welcome Friends!"
i know there's no such word as "witnessy" but this can be a fun thread.
Wait on Jehovah.
Oooh! That is the one I hate most! Makes my blood boil!
Others ...
"Let's send our love back to the friends at ___________ congregation." (said often after a public talk)
"Brother/sister _________ has been irregular in meeting attendance and field service lately." (Honestly, it makes it sound like you have a colon problem!)
"We must remember to keep a simple eye."
"It's 10:30! Time for break at Dairy Queen!" (Or is this only in Texas?)
"We need to make sure of the more important things."
"It's a conscience decision."
"When considering things that are a matter of conscience, it is also important to consider if it will stumble our brother or not." (In other words ... don't do it anyway.)