When your friends are bad for you: JWs as a case study in the dangers of ingroup bias

by Apognophos 5 Replies latest watchtower medical

  • Apognophos
    Apognophos

    How do you convince someone to get help when their friends all say they're fine? From time to time I think about how certain illnesses must be very difficult to treat because the sufferer's actual perceptions are skewed. For instance, how do you convince someone to seek treatment if they are under a paranoid delusion that they know too much and the establishment wants to put them on drugs to dull their minds? But imagine how much harder it would be to get help for this person if their entire set of friends and family also thought they were perfectly all right.

    Take Witnesses, for example. They are fearful of the world around them, some to a neurotic degree that borders on genuine paranoia. If a JW is committedly absorbing the information they are taught, then they believe that the secret, invisible ruler of the entire world is personally out to get them. He or his minions watch them, observing their body's vital signs to find a weakness when they see something forbidden that they secretly desire. If this unseen enemy can't find a weakness, then he may attack them physically.

    The JW believes that they can ward off this evil by spending hours each week performing certain rituals: sitting in a certain building, knocking on doors, and reading the same material over and over. This cleanses them of an invisible impurity, "sinfulness", that their body naturally accumulates over time and will eventually kill them. What's more, they believe that this world is essentially unreal, like a bad dream they will eventually awake from. Additionally, the world is full of nonbelievers who hide what they are really like, and who may collectively turn on them at any time. Even believers should be avoided if they seem like they may turn out to have an intangible, contagious condition known as "spiritual weakness".

    Try to put aside your personal familiarity with the religion and let the above description sink in. Would not an objective bystander label this as delusional behavior?

    But can you convince them that they need help? Of course not! Why? Because the society they're in -- their belief system, their superiors (elders, etc.), their friends, and their believing family members -- tell them that they're not the problem, the world is. So you end up with a group of people who enable each others' anxiety disorders and delusions. What's more, attempts to persuade them to think outside their box also fall under their paranoid expectations that the Devil will use other people to try to get at them.

    What ends up happening is that the individual JW's identity becomes dependent on the group. He/she cannot imagine not being a part of the group. Thus they reject large amounts of contrary information and any association with contrary people -- solely for the purpose of staying in the group. The sense of belonging becomes its own raison d'etre even if the original cause for joining the group is forgotten; it leads to a vicious circle where the further the JW pushes away from the world, the more incompatible he becomes with it, thus becoming more dependent on his ingroup.

    No matter where we're at in life, we should all ask ourself from time to time: what if I'm suffering from a delusion, and not even the people I associate with can recognize it, because we share the same issues and isolate ourselves from outside thinking? How would I know I had a problem? Who would tell me, and how would I get help, if I distrusted anyone well-educated enough to diagnose a problem and prescribe a treatment?

    Related concepts (all links go to Wikipedia): In-group favoritism, Obsessive compulsive disorder, Derealisation, Mean world syndrome, Religious paranoia.

  • sparrowdown
    sparrowdown

    Delusional people can be very convincing, I know I was in my WT delusion.

    That is why the repetetive nature of the WT message is so important. Delusions are high maintenance.

    Most Jw's spend their time trying to convince unbelievers of the delusion or reaffirming it amongst fellow believers,

    via WT studies or just in conversation.

    This is no accident, in order to keep someone convinced of an unreality you need to immerse them in it,

    with nothing that could trigger a reality check.

    Like keeping someone inprisoned in a darkened room with no access to outside light.

    After a while they get so disoriented they will believe day is night and night is day.

    This highlights the importance of having a reality touchstone.

    Someone in your life whether it be a spouse a friend or a therapist that is going to tell you the truth.

    Not just what you want to hear.

  • Fernando
    Fernando

    Just when you think it is not possible to add to or improve on the many great explanations of what exactly is wrong with our favourite cult/ists...

    Awesome post Apognophos.

  • apostatethunder
    apostatethunder

    You only need to hear the news to realize that we live in a corrupt, manipulated society where cults like the WT have a purpose beyond the obvious money-making, whether we will ever find out...or not.

    At the end of the day, being surounded by zombies is probably one of the most dangerous situations you could find yourself in and any sane person knows that. That is why you tend to find sane people helping others getting out of the darkness ans psychos doing the exact opposite.

    http://images.sodahead.com/profiles/0/0/2/0/1/0/6/6/1/zday-45912113355.jpeg

  • stuckinarut2
    stuckinarut2

    Great post apognophos!

    Very , very, well written and thought out!

    Thanks...this will come in handy.....

  • TTATTelder
    TTATTelder

    Good thought provoking post. Thanks.

    -TE

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