How To Deprogram Your Own Mind by
A. Orange
- Recognize that programming is everywhere, and it isn't all bad. Your
programming started with your parents teaching you things, and both
consciously and unconsciously programming you with all of their beliefs
and attitudes. That is not necessarily bad -- it is usually good. You
are better off for having had parents who cared about you and wanted to
teach you. But unfortunately, you also inherited all of their
misinformation, superstitions, mistakes, and irrational and untrue
beliefs.
And you also inherited your "culture", which includes all of the
false, irrational, and wrong beliefs of your entire society. And you are
left with the job of figuring out which of those beliefs are good and
true, and which are stupid and crazy.
And you are always vulnerable to pressure from your peer group, which
will always try to make you conform to their beliefs, standards, and
behavior, even if your friends are not even really aware of the fact
that they are doing it.
- Recognize that programming and deprogramming are constant, on-going
processes. Even while you are trying to deprogram and clear your mind,
television commercials will be trying to program you into believing that
you really should buy their product; you will be so happy if you do, and
you'll be beautiful and get laid too. And the politicians will always be
trying to make you believe that they are wise and right about
everything, and if you are patriotic you will never criticize them.
- Want to know the truth. This is essential. This is the whole ball
game. If you don't want to learn the truth, you probably won't.
Love the truth, even if it is sometimes inconvenient or unpleasant.
Respect the truth, cherish the truth, seek the truth above all.
People stay trapped in cults, or trapped in illusions, because they
don't really want to know the truth:
- Sometimes, they are afraid to know the truth --
- They fear that their world will fall apart if they stop
believing certain things, or admit the truth of other things. That
is one of the beliefs with which they got programmed -- the idea
that if they don't believe the right things, they will go to Hell,
or they will lose their ticket to Heaven, or something else really
bad will happen to them. One of the things that cults do is implant
phobias about leaving the cult, or learning the truth about the
cult.
- They are afraid of losing their status or membership in the
group -- they are afraid that they will be shunned and ostracized if
they don't believe the same things as the other people around them.
- They fear that they will have to leave the cult if they stop
believing in it, and they will stop believing in it if they learn a
bunch of negative things about it. ("Then what
will I do with my life?!") So they plug their ears and
close their eyes, and play "Hear no evil, see no evil..."
- Some people just don't
want to see that they were fooled.
"I refuse
to believe that I spent twelve years of my life in a cult. It isn't a
cult. It can't be a cult. It's a wonderful movement." As
they say, "Denial isn't just a river in
Egypt."
- Some people just don't want to give it up.
- "If I leave the group, I will be lonely
because I won't have any friends. So shut up and quit telling me
disturbing things about it."
- "I have lots of time invested here. I'm a
respected elder. If I quit the organization, I'll be a nobody."
- Don't condemn yourself. Self-condemnation and self-criticism
are part
of the brain-washing and indoctrination process, and they are
counter-productive when it comes to deprogramming. If you find that you
have been programmed to believe some goofy idea, then just recognize
that it is an irrational, illogical, goofy idea, and reject it, but do
not condemn yourself for having believed it for a while.
It's just like, if, while exploring the Wild West, you find that you
have an arrow stuck in your back, pull it out.
- Don't wallow in self-contempt and guilt, condemning yourself for
having stupidly gotten an arrow stuck in your back.
- Don't imagine that you are somehow all fucked up for having gotten
stuck with an arrow.
- Don't imagine that finding an arrow stuck in your back proves that
you are somehow inferior.
Just pull the arrow out and then get
on with your life.
Now that doesn't mean that you shouldn't examine your behavior, and
change it if you are doing something wrong. But be wary of excessive
fault-finding and self-criticism. Cults will teach you to do that, and
will even try to convince you that you will make yourself more holy by
constantly condemning yourself and putting yourself down and feeling
guilty about everything. All that really accomplishes is messing up
your mind, destroying your self-confidence and self-respect, and making
you unable to think clearly or act decisively.
- Watch out for other people condemning you.
People who want to
control you will try to make you feel stupid, inferior, flawed, and
mentally incompetent for disagreeing with them.
As mentioned above, self-condemnation and self-criticism
are a
big part of the brain-washing and indoctrination process, so those
who would like to control you would also like to get you criticizing
yourself and being down on yourself. And Margaret
Thaler Singer added that inducing feelings of powerlessness, covert
fear, guilt, and dependency in the victims was also a part of the
brainwashing process.
So don't let them make you believe that you are flawed and inferior.
When someone is reading your beads and listing your faults, it almost
always means that they want to control you -- to change your behavior to
something that they want.
- Also watch out for other people trying to clip your wings, and keep
you from being your whole self.
For example, one of the commonest crippling stunts that cults or
churches pull on people is demanding that they not feel their feelings.
"You must only feel Eternal Bliss" or "You must only feel Serenity and
Gratitude". Anger, especially anger at the evils of the cult and its
leaders, is supposedly very bad.
Bill Wilson wrote:
It
is a spiritual axiom that every time we are disturbed, no matter what
the cause, there is something wrong with us. If somebody hurts
us and we are sore, we are in the wrong also. But are there no
exceptions to this rule? What about "justifiable" anger? If somebody
cheats us, aren't we entitled to be mad? Can't we be properly angry
with self-righteous folk? For us in A.A. these are dangerous
exceptions. We have found that justified anger ought to be left to
those better qualified to handle it. Twelve
Steps and Twelve Traditions, William Wilson, page 90.
What rot. You are wrong to get mad when somebody hurts you or commits
crimes against you? Such anger should be "left to those better qualified
to handle it"? And just who is that? Nobody.
All it means is, you can't feel your anger. You have to
"stuff your feelings." Pseudo-religious garbage like that will do a
good job of crippling you, and keeping you from making trouble for your
oppressors.
Likewise, some churches or cults will tell you that you shouldn't
feel horny, or find the opposite sex attractive, or think about sex with
them. Nonsense. You brain is hardwired to think about it and want it --
That's what keeps the human race going. We would be extinct if we could
be logical and rational about sex and having children. "Too much bother;
a big hassle; too expensive..." But logic has nothing to do with it, and
that's why we are still here.
Another common crippling stunt that cults pull on their members is
demanding that members stop thinking critically -- stop what they call
"having doubts": "If you are
really holy, then you won't have any doubts." Nonsense.
Normal, sane, healthy people have lots of doubts when con-men and phony
holy men try to foist a stupid illogical hoax on them. Those doubts are
your remaining sanity warning you that something sounds fishy.
Similarly, cults and other mind-manipulators will tell you that you
cannot trust your own mind and your own thinking (so you should let
them do your thinking for you). If you buy into that idea, it will
really cripple you. You won't be able to think anything without also
thinking that it must be wrong, because you thought it. (But then the
thought that your thinking is wrong should also be wrong... So your
thinking must be right...)
- Beware of wanting to believe.
On the TV show "The X-Files", Mulder had a poster on the wall of his
office that said, "I Want To Believe". That's okay for the X-Files and
stories about flying saucers, but it leads to disaster in real life.
Instead of wanting to believe, want to know the truth.
Wanting
to believe is perhaps the most powerful dynamic initiating and
sustaining cult-like behavior. The Wrong
Way Home: Uncovering the Patterns of Cult Behavior in American
Society, Arthur J. Deikman, M.D., page 137.
Billy Graham says that everyone really wants to
believe in a dogmatic, fascist religion:
"The
world longs for authority, finality, and conclusiveness. It is weary
of theological floundering and uncertainty. Belief exhilarates the
human spirit; doubt depresses." Billy Graham quoted in Holy Terror: The Fundamentalist War on America's
Freedoms in Religion, Politics, and Our Private Lives, Flo Conway
and Jim Siegelman, page 144. Also see: The
Wrong Way Home: Uncovering the Patterns of Cult Behavior in American
Society, Arthur J. Deikman, M.D., page 143.
Certainty
(as Billy Graham testified) is one of the great benefits of [dogmatic] religious belief. The Wrong Way Home: Uncovering the Patterns of Cult
Behavior in American Society, Arthur J. Deikman, M.D., page
144.
- Watch out for self-deceptive ego games.
For example, in some cults or religions, they will flatter you and
tell you that you are very important, and involved in very important
work, doing the Will of the Lord, ushering in the Millenium, saving the
world, if you believe what they say and do what they say. But if you buy
into their game, it is you who is allowing yourself to be deceived, and
it's you who is enjoying the big ego game.
Part
of the attraction of believing the leader's views and actions to be of
paramount importance is that the follower's own sense of importance is
heightened. The Wrong Way Home: Uncovering
the Patterns of Cult Behavior in American Society, Arthur J.
Deikman, M.D., page 67.
"If the leader and his religion are saving the
world, and I follow the leader, then I am saving the world, which makes
me very good and very important."
Conversely, if someone criticizes the cult, its leader, or its
teachings, then that reflects badly on the member. If the cult member
believes the criticisms to be true, then he will go from being a noble
savior of the world to being just a foolish follower of an evil
charlatan. So the member has a vested interest in rejecting any
criticism of the group or its leader -- all based on his own egotism.
Thus he will resist learning the truth, out of purely selfish interests.
- Beware of comparing apples and oranges.
Beware of equating
things that are not equal.
For example, many people say that they really like the A.A. program
because it is such a wonderful social club with such brotherhood and
fellowship. Excuse me, but it is supposed to be an alcoholism treatment
program. They seem to forget that it doesn't actually work to cure
alcoholism, and just proclaim that it's great because they like the
social life, the brotherhood and the "spirituality". That's mixing
apples and oranges. When I go to the doctor to get some medical care, I
don't expect a big party in the waiting room. I just go get the pills,
and go home. If I want a party, I go someplace else.
- Watch your own mind.
Watch your thoughts, attitudes, and
slogans. Also watch your desires and fears.
This is the heart of the deprogramming program. This is a constant,
never-ending task. Watch your mind all day long, or as much as you can
remember to.
You have to not only watch what people are telling you, but watch how
you react to it, and what it makes happen inside your head. Watch what
you are thinking, and if you can, understand why you are thinking that.
Notice your desires, and how certain statements can arouse them. I'm
not knocking desires, or asking you to. Just look at them and make a
note of what it is you actually want: love, approval, status, power,
sex, wealth, possessions, knowledge, wisdom, compassion, virtue,
goodness, whatever. Then notice how certain ideas or statements can
arouse certain desires. And then notice how some people (especially
politicians) are skilled in tossing out buzz-words, phrases, and slogans
that will arouse certain desires in you. They are messing with your mind
by manipulating your feelings.
Likewise, watch your fears, and see how politicians
and preachers are good at arousing them to manipulate your
thinking. "If you don't suspend the Bill of Rights
and let the Homeland Security Force violate everybody's privacy
and spy on everybody, then the nasty Arabs will get
you." "If you don't give the oil
billionaires a big tax cut, and let them drill for oil in every
wilderness and wildlife preserve in the world, then they will go broke
and run out of oil and you will freeze in the dark." "If you don't believe all this stuff, and give your money to
the preacher man, then God will get mad at you and you will go to Hell."
- Watch out for commonly-accepted fallacies -- the things that "everybody
knows" are true, but which aren't.
For example, it is commonly accepted that alcoholics can't or won't
quit drinking until they "bottom
out" or "hit bottom". That is completely untrue. People quit at all
stages of alcoholism; some even quit before they could even be called
alcoholics, because they see a nasty problem starting to develop.
So how did the idea that alcoholics must hit bottom come to be such a
universally-accepted piece of folklore? Well, what happened is Bill
Wilson found that ordinary, relatively-sane people wouldn't join his
cult religion or believe in his grandiose, bombastic sermons, or accept
his brain-damaged superstitious nonsense. Only the really sick,
frightened, dying people who were desperately grabbing at anything that
might save their lives would swallow Wilson's bullshit. So Wilson made
up a story about how alcoholics can't really quit drinking and start to
recover until they hit bottom and "the lash of alcoholism drives them to
A.A." (see: Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions, page
24). A.A. members have been spreading that little piece of
misinformation for the last 60 years, and now, everybody who thinks he
knows something about alcoholism repeats it. But it is still untrue.
You can find plenty of similar examples, everywhere. The common
wisdom often isn't.
- Read Kasl and Sagan:
Charlotte Kasl "Many Roads, One Journey:
Moving Beyond the 12 Steps", and Carl Sagan "The Demon
Haunted World: Science as a Candle in the Dark". What those two
books have in common is that they both push common sense and logic, and
leave me with a sort of positive, upbeat feeling. They will help to
clear things up and put some good ideas in your head.
- Understand the games that the mind-programmers and brainwashers play
on people's heads, and the techniques that they use for mind-control
For instance, there is the phenomenon called "cognitive dissonance".
What it means is: People want to keep all of their beliefs, actions,
thoughts, and feelings in harmony with each other. People want to do
what they believe is right and good, and if they do otherwise, they feel
bad -- they feel "dissonance". The "dissonance" is just like musical
dissonance -- it feels jarring and discordant and wrong.
Brainwashers have discovered that they can use cognitive dissonance
to change people's behavior, beliefs, feelings, and thoughts -- force a
change in one, and the others will follow. If you force people to
perform certain actions, they will eventually come to believe that it's
okay -- it must be okay, because they wouldn't want to be doing bad
things all of the time. If you force people to say something out loud to
a group over and over again, the speakers will eventually come to
believe that it is true, because they don't want to feel like they are
habitual liars. The subconscious mind's solution to the problem is:
believe that it is all true, so now there is no conflict. (That's why A.A. instructs newcomers to "Fake It Until You
Make It.")
Since we normally only reveal our innermost, most embarrassing and
damaging secrets to our closest and most trusted friends, if we confess
everything to a room full of strangers, then cognitive dissonance kicks
in, and our subconscious minds will start to assume that those people
must really be our closest, most-trusted, friends. That eliminates the
conflict over having told embarrassing personal secrets to a bunch of
complete strangers. Our feelings will actually change so that we feel
much closer to those people. Organizations like Werner Erhard's "est"
scam, Alcoholics Anonymous, and various cult churches use this technique
to create feelings of instant closeness, "brotherhood", and "fellowship"
among the members of a group.
Likewise, if you force people to perform horrible acts, like kill
Jews in a concentration camp, then the killers will change their beliefs
about the victims to make their actions okay, and will eventually come
to the conclusion that there is nothing wrong after all. "It isn't
really murder because they aren't really people. They are enemies of the
state, and need to be eliminated. They have it coming for what the Jews
did to us. They are a threat to us, and must be eliminated." That stunt
usually (but not always) works even if the killers had originally
thought that Jews were okay people. (A small, seldom-mentioned detail of
history is that not all German soldiers could stomach killing the Jews.
Some soldiers had to be transferred out of the concentration camps
because they were going nuts just from seeing all of the Jews killed.)
A recent movie showed how the Nazis would pick out some Jews to act
as workers in the concentration camps, forcing them to manage the other
Jews who were being herded into the gas chambers. Those worker Jews
would of course experience horrible conflicts over their job of helping
to kill their fellow Jews, but cognitive dissonance would kick in, and
they would end up seeing everything in terms of proper order, proper
behavior, and proper functioning: "A Jew who makes a fuss and disrupts
the efficient workings of the gas chambers is a trouble-maker and a bad
Jew. Good Jews should just go along with the procedure and not make any
trouble."
- Break the exclusivity of information input.
Avoid getting all of
your information from just one group or one source. (Any
one source. Don't trust anybody that much.) Examine both (or all)
sides of an issue. Don't let anyone dictate what you may read, see, or
hear. One of the most powerful tools that cults or Communists use to
brainwash people is information control -- preventing the victims from
getting any information contrary to the brainwashing.
Recognize that three different people who all say the same thing is
not necessarily three different sources of information. For example, the
evening news programs of NBC, ABC, and CBS may all tell you exactly the
same story, just parroting the information that was just released by the
White House. Also, the corporate owners of the networks often keep
Jennings, Brokaw, and Rather from telling the ugly truths or asking the
hard questions. (They similarly muzzled the New York Times, and
kept it from reporting how Gov. Jeb Bush rigged the election in Florida
in 2000, so such problems are everywhere.) Sometimes, National Public
Radio or Public Television will tell you something else, but sometimes
you may have to go on the Internet and check out BBC or the London Times
to get the other side of the story. (And also check out Canada and
Sydney, Australia, and New Delhi, India while you are at it. They speak
English, too.)
- Break self-programming.
People often get programmed to program themselves:
- Think about the guy who is always playing "motivational" tapes
that will supposedly teach you how to get rich quick or build up your
self-esteem or something... Now lots of cults are into it too, and
they have a set of tapes for you.
- And then there are the people who are always reading the same book
or small set of books over and over again, as if those books held all
of the wisdom in the world.
- Then there are people who just constantly repeat slogans, which
effectively stops them from actually thinking.
- And there are some people who practice meditation or chanting
constantly, reprogramming themselves and stopping rational thought,
all day, every day. (Note that meditation and chanting can be good
things, but phony gurus teach people to use them excessively, as
mind-control tools.)
- And then there are meetings, services, and get-togethers. Churches
and cults have church services and "Bible study" and socials, and A.A.
and Amway have a meeting for every occasion. Note that this is a
matter of frequency, and of how much time they take out of your life.
One church service a week is normal for all churches, but when someone
tells you to do "90 meetings in 90 days", or to come to chanting or
meditation or prayer or Bible study sessions every single day, then
the warning bells should be going off in your head. And you should be hearing klaxon horns and air raid sirens
when people brag about doing three meetings per day.
- And then there is denial and rationalization. Some people will
endlessly deny or rationalize every negative thing they hear about
their leader or their church or cult (or their corporation or their
political party, or whatever). They will never actually let a contrary
idea get into their heads.
- -- Which leads to self-censorship. Some people censor their own
minds, and will not even allow themselves to think one forbidden
thought. So of course they stay programmed.
- TV Commercials sell you images, and they are very powerful. Watch
out. They tell you that you will be beautiful and sexually attractive if
you look like their images.
"You want to buy these clothes, and
style your hair like this, and wear these glasses, and lose weight, and
make your waist narrower and your boobs bigger, if you are a female. And
if you are a male, you will want to flash the cash and drive this kind
of a car, and buy this kind of a house so that you can move in a trophy
wife..."
They are selling you images of "the beautiful people". After a while,
you will start to feel like there must be something wrong with you if
you don't look and act like the people on TV. And you will start to
think you must be a weirdo if you don't believe and say what the people
on TV believe and say. But the beautiful people on TV are paid to only
say non-disturbing things, to not rock the boat. They won't tell you
about their sponsors -- corporate polluters -- poisoning your children,
not a word. They won't tell you that the sponsor's car is a deathtrap,
likely to roll over or explode in flames. They won't tell you that their
sponsor cheats its own employees out of their retirement funds and
health insurance. They won't say anything about their sponsors feeding
your children pesticide- or herbicide-contaminated or
genetically-altered food, not a word. That would be making
trouble. So just how beautiful are those beautiful
people, really? Are you sure you want to be like them? Nevertheless, those images are still extremely
attractive, aren't they?
Years ago, there was a rather iconoclastic Commissioner of the FCC
named Nicholas Johnson who said that there was a lot more on TV than met
the eye. He observed that furniture polish commercials actually sell
expensive hardwood furniture as well as the polish. They imply that your
life will somehow be happier, more elegant, genteel, and cultured, if
you have a beautiful house full of the kind of furniture that requires
furniture polish.
So, as you watch TV, watch how they are trying to program your mind.
Watch what they are really selling. Notice what they are selling,
besides what they seem to be selling.
As a defense, don't watch so much TV. And even if you
are an addicted media junkie, you can still watch video tapes instead of
channels with commercials. That way you, not they, control your
information input. Oh, and Public Television isn't so bad, either.
- Read the web page on Propaganda
Techniques several times. It helps to understand and recognize the
stunts they pull on you and the mind games they play on your head to get
you to accept certain ideas and beliefs.
Click Fruit for
Menu
Secret Agent Orange working with
www.AAdeprogramming.com
Last updated 7 December 2002. The most recent version
of this file can be found at http://www.geocities.com/ageorange/
|