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Mind Control
Programming:
Understanding, Recognizing, and Nullifying It
by Cheryl Rainfield, 1994,
2000
Warning: The contents of this article may be triggering. If you’re a
survivor, you may want to read it gradually at different times or with a
supportive friend or partner. It also might be a good idea to make sure
that you are in a safe space while you read this, and for some time
afterwards. You might want to remind yourself of a safe place inside you
that parts can go if they need to. It’s a healing and nurturing thing to
respect your limits and boundaries, and what you can hear, for now.
This article
is an overview of programming. There are many specific programs and
effects. However, in my experience, the ways to change or halt the
effects of programming, no matter what the specific program, are
similar, just as some of the most common effects of programming are
similar. So although this article is "only" an overview, it should help
you to effectively deal with programming.
What is Programming?
Programming involves a message or series of messages
(often accompanied by sensory, emotional, or body memories) that repeat
or resonate inside a survivor’s mind at a certain cue or trigger
(delivered by personalities who were trained, through torture, to do
that). Programming is a deliberate tool used by cults to control their
victims. It is trained into victims through the use of mind control and
torture at a very young age. The degree to which a victim incorporates
programming into her personality system is often a large part of her
chance at survival. Often the torture does not stop until the cult is
assured that the victim not only knows the new message, but has taken it
into a deep core level. The survivor often has to create specific
personalities to withstand the torturous event and message, and has to
accept particular names and roles for personalities that the cult sets
for them.
When a program is set off, and personalities begin to do
the job that they were trained to do (through torture), the survivor
re-experiences much of the same trauma and terror that she did while
being tortured, along with programming messages. She may not consciously
hear or register the programming messages, or may assume that they are
her "thoughts."
Why Should I Care About It, Anyway?
Unless a survivor is aware of her programming or knows
what it looks and feels like, she may simply be responding to these old
messages. Programming messages can be put forth by other personalities
so that they seem like the survivor's conscious thinking, and it is only
with struggle that she recognizes that no, she doesn't think or feel
that way, or want to complete that action. There are also times when a
survivor can be fighting programming without realizing that that is what
she is doing, such as when she hears a cue but doesn’t recognize it as a
cue, and spends the next few hours trying to contain, suppress, or
counter the thoughts, images, or impulses that were triggered.
Regardless of whether or not a survivor recognizes
programming occurring inside her, the messages can feel compelling and
strong, and can be extremely convincing. They often create great
emotional trauma, and internal disorder, chaos, and fighting between
parts. It can take a lot of conscious work and emotional energy to
combat programming messages, and to change or halt their effect.
However, once a survivor is aware of her personality system, her
process, her own programs and what helps her when those programs are
occurring, programs can be more easily diverted, worked with, and
changed.
Working with programming messages can help a survivor
access information about the original events that led to the programming
message. For instance, she may be able to uncover memories of the first
time those messages were forced on the survivor and of other abuse and
torture events that reinforced those messages; information about how a
survivor's personality system is set up - origin (survivor or originally
cult-created parts), names, jobs, background about specific parts, and
beliefs that they may have learned and retained from the cult, etc.
Having such information can help you make more sense
about things you react to or believe in, and can help you form a greater
picture of your abuse experience. It can help give you a firmer foothold
in understanding and controlling your own reactions and triggers, and
help you to work more effectively in your healing. Of course, you may
not want to know all this information, and may find it overwhelming.
That’s fine; if it doesn’t work for you, don’t use it.
Programming Can Be Recognized By:
-
Thoughts that do not seem
to fit with the way you think now, such as "I am evil," or "I need
to be with ________ (an abuser, usually someone in your family)
because they love me."
-
Phrases that repeat
themselves, that feel very familiar, and that often have a great
emotional impact (such as panic, desolation, extreme mistrust, or
being utterly overwhelmed), or that trigger self-harm, dissociation,
switching, or inaction. An example would be: "My life is slipping
through my fingers," "I'm all alone."
-
Intense self-hate in any
form should be looked at as possible programming, including any
thought, feeling, or action that leads you (or would lead you) to be
hurt, damaged, controlled, or re-traumatized - emotionally, mentally
or physically. The messages may not be as obvious as programming,
might only sound like "I shouldn’t get close to anyone," but if you
dig down a little deeper beneath this conscious message, you may
hear more of the whole message - "I am contaminated and
contaminating, therefore I shouldn’t ever get close to anyone."
Programming messages that involve self-hate may also be blatant
statements: "I’m no good," "No one will ever like me," that you may
have absorbed or believed for a long time, or they may be much less
blatant messages that seem to come out of nowhere: "I’m a slut."
-
Feeling that you have to do
something and have no choice, or can see no other way out of a
situation. This could appear as a blatant message that tells you:
"________ is preordained," or a less blatant message that tells you:
"If I don't do ______ right now, then ______ will happen (I will
die; lose my friend; fail at what I'm doing; be hated.)."
-
Images of hurting or
killing yourself that suddenly appear in your mind, as if for no
reason, and that make you feel like you have to act on them. These
are sometimes accompanied by auditory messages or body feelings. For
instance - you are feeling fine, you’re waiting for a subway train
to take you home, and suddenly you have a flash of yourself stepping
off the platform in front of the train - or an urge to jump onto the
tracks. Or you may hear repeated messages or "thoughts" telling you
that you are dead or will be dead, or that someone close to you will
die.
-
Any "thoughts" or messages
that discredit your experience as a survivor and a multiple, or that
disempower you should be examined to see whether or not they are
programming. This can include constant harsh judgement of yourself;
degrading, hurtful and damaging "thoughts" about yourself, and any
"thoughts," feelings, or messages that trigger intense feeling and
make you want to act in such a way that would hurt, isolate, or
trigger you.
-
Messages or phrases that
tell you to do something that would be dangerous, hurtful, or go
against your intuition or feeling of what is safe for you. For
example, "I must call/write/email my mother (or abusive relative)
because she’s waiting to hear from me, and really loves me."
-
Phrases that use language
and thinking that do not feel like your own, that sound biblical or
prophetical, or that sound like something you may have been told.
For example, "I am walking to my doom if I am walking away from
_______ (my parents, the cult, etc.)," or "The cult can see/hear me
no matter where I am, and they know what I'm saying."
-
Hearing or seeing inside
your head, or overlapping the physical world, sounds or images that
are used to "warn," frighten, or threaten parts inside, or make them
compliant, or that you remember being used in your abuse. For
example, alarm bells, flashing lights (usually red), certain symbols
(such as the spiral, the peace symbol, the symbol for anarchy, the
symbol for life, the yin yang symbol, etc.).
-
Phrases that are not heard
loudly or clearly, but that seem to be continually running behind
your conscious mind. Often the language will be formal.
-
Familiar common sayings,
nursery rhymes, children’s songs, or portions of popular songs are
often cues or triggers for programming. They may be an indication of
programming if:
-
you hear them repeating
over and over in your head and do not like them or how they feel but
can’t make them stop,
-
you didn’t grow up hearing
them but they persist inside your head,
-
you remember them being
used in your abuse (or the same tune but violent or cult words
instead of the "regular" words), and consistently hear them repeat
inside your head.
Symptoms or Effects of Programming:
Programming in progress can also be recognized by some of
the most common "symptoms" or effects of various programs:
-
feeling like you are
spinning, the room around you is spinning, or your head is spinning.
-
everything around you
suddenly becoming too bright or too loud, or feeling like your
senses have suddenly been intensified past what is comfortable or
normal.
-
having your head suddenly
feel dizzy or fuzzy.
-
feeling literally unable to
talk (I describe it as having "cement mouth").
-
finding yourself suddenly
spilling out detailed information about yourself, your
personalities, your internal healing process, or where you’re at
right not when you did not want to share that information, or when
you’re sharing it with someone you don’t particularly like or trust.
-
sudden violent, injurious,
or death-related images that appear in your head about yourself,
someone you know, a stranger, or a pet.
-
sudden and repeated images
of yourself doing something inappropriate that would hurt someone
else or that would jeopardize your career or feeling of self-worth.
-
a desire to suddenly
contact a family member, an abuser, or someone you don’t trust.
-
a sudden impulse to go to a
specific location that you do not know or don’t remember having
heard of before (ie. no one’s suggested it to you).
-
a sudden or repeated belief
that you will die or someone close to you will die.
It is a good idea to recognize and identify the
programming messages that you do hear, and to consciously work on
understanding and changing those messages. This gives you more power
over your own reactions and triggers, your feelings and state of being,
and your life - and it will help you in your healing.
Recognizing programming and combatting can be an
important part of the healing process.
To help change or halt the effects of programming:
-
The first step is to hear
and recognize that it is happening.
-
Next, make note of the
specific messages that you are being told. It often helps to write
them down.
-
If you can, it helps to
take the message back to its source. Ask parts inside when they
first heard the message, who told it to them, and what the context
was.
-
Try writing out all the
steps of the program that you can recognize in as much detail as you
can.
-
Try to let some of your
inner conversations about this take place on paper. This can often
help more parts inside you to become aware of what is happening
while it is happening, thus they won't be as easily convinced of the
lies cult has given you. You may also find out more information than
you otherwise would have if you didn’t write it out or let parts
write.
-
Write out counter-messages
to the program messages that you hear. Make them strong, positive,
and healing, and have them address or counter the cult messages.
Often there will be parts inside who know just what to say. An
example of a programming message and a counter message is:
Programming message: "I’m going to die/I deserve to die."
Counter-message: "That is something the cult told us to control us and
make us afraid. It is a lie. They may have told us that under torture -
maybe even convinced parts of us that it is true, but it is not. We are
healthy and strong. We will live a long life - and we will not let the
cult control us by fear. This message you are repeating, that you were
told, is a lie."
-
Have compassion for the
parts who hold programming messages, and find out what they really
want underneath the messages, lies, and distortions. Often, when you
really listen to these parts and get past all their cult-prompted
messages, you’ll find that they just want to protect you and keep
you/them alive, and that they never wanted to hurt others. Parts who
hold programming messages were originally created to protect you and
to keep you alive - because some part inside had to do that - and
underneath all that bluster, they are quite vulnerable.
It often helps alleviate some of the fear and reaction you may have to
these parts or their messages when you realize this. This doesn’t mean
that those parts should continue perpetuating cult lies; they should be
encouraged to stop. But it can help to know that they, like you, only
wanted to live.
-
It may also help to write
out empowering or countering messages to programming messages, and
to put them in places where you will see them - taped to the mirror,
the wall, folded in a book, beside your bed - to remind you of the
good work you’re doing, and that you don't have to act on
programming. For example, "It is a good idea to treat myself the way
I feel people I care about should be treated."
-
It can also help to hear
some of the positive or counter messages you’ve created from safe
outside people that you trust. This can help to reinforce the
positive messages, especially if you hear them often; eventually,
some of them will sink in.
-
You may even want to make a
tape of some of your positive or counter messages, and listen to the
tape when you feel you need to, or to ask your therapist or a friend
to create such a tape for you, based on counter messages that you’ve
created.
If programming
is occurring in the moment:
-
Try to do the things listed
above.
-
If a program is functioning
that you’ve already written up, consult the steps that you’ve
recognized, and locate where you are in the program - or write out
the steps that are occurring.
-
Announce to all your parts
inside that programming is functioning and that you need to protect
yourselves; you now have new ways of coping.
-
Find ways to ground or
centre yourself, and encourage comforting, healing, mothering, or
protective personalities to come forward (or out in your body).
-
Help parts inside to hear
each other and be there for each other. (Writing out internal
conversation often helps with this.)
-
Find ways to comfort
yourself and make yourself safe. Surround yourself with safe things
and/or people (ie. teddy bears, toys, soothing music. Wrap a blanket
around you and keep a notepad and pen or crayons beside you. Make
yourself a warm drink.)
-
Express yourself safely as
much as you can - through paper (writing, art, scribbling), through
screaming or moaning into a pillow, pounding a pillow, or going for
a fast hard walk. Try to keep aware of the messages going on in your
head; if you only do something like scream, and ignore the internal
chaos, you may find yourself pulled more deeply into the intense
emotions accompanying the programming, and the messages themselves.
For that reason, I prefer writing everything out so I can see/hear
what is going on.
-
Check with yourself how
realistic the thing is that you feel you need to do. Ask yourself
whether it's truly something that you want to do, with healing and
care on your side.
-
Remind yourself that what
is happening is a program; it’s a good thing not to act on it.
You are stronger than the cult, and by looking at and
recognizing your programming, you’re not letting them win. Just by
recognizing your programs, you are light years away from where the cult
ever expected you to be. You are doing real healing work that will help
you to heal faster, feel better, and gain greater control over your
process. A safe journey to each of you.
©
Cheryl Rainfield, 1994, 2000.
If you found this
article helpful you might want to read:
Ritual Abuse - Definitions, Glossary, The Use of Mind
Control
The report of the Ritual Abuse Task Force Los Angeles County Commission
For Women, March 15, 1991.
Indicators of a Ritual Abuse History
from a study by Caren Cook, 1991
Common Programs Observed in Survivors of Satanic
Ritualistic Abuse
by David W. Neswald, M.A. M.F.C.C. in collaboration with Catherine
Gould, Ph.D. and Vicki Graham-Costain
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