Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Identifying Predators, Spiritual, Financial, Sexual




There are common traits, common behaviors in human predators of all kinds. Spiritual scammers often operate the same way and use the same methods as other types of criminal con artists, batterers, and rapists. These different kinds of abuse often blend into each other.A liar doesn’t just tell falsehoods/lies to strangers or only in certain situations. A liar routinely lies to everyone. In the same way, a spiritual fraud is not just a spiritual liar. He or she will always lie about other things as well.Understanding these patterns of deceit among abusers and rapists gives us direct insight into the patterns of spiritual frauds. The following points are offered specifically about the patterns of physical abusers but the parallels to spiritual exploiters should be clear. The aim of this post is to help people in spotting frauds before they can do harm, and to help those who have been harmed find help.1. Abusers are charming and tend to be very skilled at social manipulation.2. They are skilled liars. They will also declare they are very honest and honorable but their actual actions will show otherwise.3. They are in control of their actions, not out-of-control. They do not harm everyone they meet. They are very careful to abuse people they feel confident they can get away with harming, such as wives/girlfriends, children, “apprentices,” or those they are “instructing” ceremonially. Substance abuse may increase their aggression but you should never accept being high/drunk as an excuse for their actions. They are far more in control of their actions than they let on and they also harm their victims when sober.4. They blame others for their behavior. “The abuser shifts responsibility for his actions away from himself and onto others, a shift that allows him to justify his abuse because the other person supposedly "caused" his behavior.” The fact is, abusing another person is a choice. It is the fault of no one but the abuser. 5. While “friends” and acquaintances will be subjected to manipulation, lies and sometimes emotional abuse, usually only the abuser’s intimate partners and immediate family will see the monstrous side of them. Abusers are very invested in their public image, and will use acquaintances to lie for them and/or pass on their lies in their defense. They will spend a great deal of time lying to non-intimate “friends” to lay a false trail of misdirection and alibis. On the internet and in long-distance phone calls, it is particularly easy for abusers to construct a good front for their online friends who may never meet them in person.6. Abusers specialize in finding out your vulnerabilities. In the beginning they will tell you how special you are. They will encourage you to confess your fears and vulnerabilities, and they will make a good show of being vulnerable themselves (even though it is just an act and built on lies). They do this to make you emotionally dependent on them, and so later they can use these things to harm and manipulate you. 7. They will seem too good to be true. And they are. There is a common misconception that predators and abusers are easy to spot, that they display obvious signs of their predatory nature. While there are warning signs to look out for (linked below), predators have carefully tailored their disguises through their years of abusing others and getting away with it. If predators weren’t skilled at convincing potential victims and supporters that they’re a nice guy (and those who commit physical abuse are overwhelmingly male), they wouldn’t be successful at what they do. They’ve learned how to fool and manipulate people. It’s their profession. If they weren’t good at fooling people, they would have moved on to some other way of making a living by now. By the time an abuser is middle-aged or elderly, they are very experienced at it; they are not going to change. Abusive behavior usually starts after the victim has made an emotional, spiritual, and/or financial commitment to the predator. Abuse usually starts right after some milestone: moving in together, getting married, pregnancy, or the birth of the first child. With spiritual predators, it’s often once the victim has made a ceremonial commitment and/or given the predator a large amount of money. Once that investment on the part of the victim is there, the predator knows the victim will be hesitant to throw away all that time and effort they’ve invested in the relationship. By that point the abuser has probably also isolated the victim from other sources of support and information, and has made sure the victim sees them as the unquestionable source of the truth. The vast majority of rapists don’t hang out in alleys to commit “stranger” rape. “Over 70% of sexual assaults are committed by someone the survivor knows. Over 40% of sexual assaults occur in the victim's home and another 30% take place in the home of a friend, neighbor or relative.”If you’ve been abused, there is help available. Once you know the patterns to look for, abusers are much easier to spot. Remember, if someone has harmed you, you can bet there are other victims out there. If everyone who has been abused speaks up, the world will change. Those who work the hotlines, who counsel victims of domestic violence and other forms of sexual and spiritual abuse, have heard it all before. They will recognize your story. They won't be shocked and you don't have to be ashamed. The patterns are all too common.

4 comments:

  1. I had left the churches many years ago having experienced far too much hidden manipulations financial focus and hypocracy. My own cousins are high in the Christian icon world crossed with narcissism, ritual/Illumaniti, political power,and wealth. My most memorial experience was coming to Oregon and finding child molesting and incest part of the norm, covered by the courts, police. A pastor who had taken the place of another who had been molesting kids as he did in his last church finally had someone report it, little good it did, having a psychotic wife working for the DA. Nothing happened to them as nothing ever happens here. They moved and found a new church. But how did all the parents of these children allow him to go free, is it because this is the nature of the type of people attending there ? Victims are devalued and punished and even character assasinated in our county. At one point of having a new pastor come in working with DV women, I had made my mind up to file a restraining order on my husband after years of his bipolar manic eposodes generally altered with prescription drugs, and alcohol, flares of rage up 24/7 financially stipping our accounts before paying bills, then retreating to his own bedroom, locking himself in with acception to food and the rest room literally for a good three weeks per month as if it was a ritual. I thought I would speak to someone before going into the court after being told how mentally ill, and physically ill he was "I needed to do more for him ". The new pastor of this same church taking women from the secular womens shelter for ministry help told me, I just needed to write a list of all the wrongs I caused my husband and repent and apology to him. A 400 lb, demon possessed man who let his hair grow down to his back, was unclean, screaming and raging or silently refused all communication with me including all intimacy and he refused to even participate in meals, activities, and even holidays. My kids all grown now never come home due to him as his doctor continues to write him prescriptions.his siblings have averaged some 5-7 marriage each. I would say I don't think his problems are me. I think he is mentally ill and addicted and he refuses to face his own family and childhood abuses and dysfunction. Listening to these pastors I lost my home ,credit and 20 yrs of my life including the joy of my kids and grandchildren. I understand this mans-Pastors wife is wanting to leave him. I wish you had a forum for this to discuss in details with solutions.

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  2. My husband and I left the institutional "church" years ago after participating in a denomination for almost 21 years serving in many different ways. We have been endeavoring to recover from what we now understand was intense spiritual abuse. Our now grown children struggle as well due to what was done/taught to them. We have many regrets. We do all still have a personal relationship with the Lord understanding that this "religion" was not about love nor God for all it's rhetoric. In reviewing our journey and the things we experienced I am horrified to look at it in whole and realize how MUCH sexual misconduct there was. I myself was stalked, molested, inappropriately touched, treated and spoken to by men I trusted - pastors, elders, leaders. As I began to minister to other women I realized that many of them had been molested, raped, incested etc by brothers, uncles, fathers, as well as pastors, leaders,elders etc. "No talk" rules were instilled with the fear of God and threat of dishonoring Him as well as our denomination if we spoke up or exposed these abuses in any way. Although I know it won't change the reality that many of us women must deal with and hopefully recover and heal from, I cannot help wondering WHY, why does this type of secret sin seem so prevalent in the "church" setting. It seems especially in some of the more conservative denominations. I've learned so much about myself and the True God of Love where we can live in the light without fear and I am doing well though I still have bouts of grief at times. I have a precious loved one who is still caught in this mess that seems and feels like an evil web, the more so because it represents itself as God's "church". How can I help? How can I make a difference? I do have a lot of compassion, believe it or not, for these abusive men because I cannot help but believe they were victims themselves . . . only brokeness manifests such awful behavior. There has to be an underlying reason for what is going on behind closed doors, in this case church doors. Does anyone have any thoughts or comments on this?

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