I've been reading Cults in Our Midst and it's really striking to me how much being a member of a cult seems to resemble being in an abusive relationship, and the difficulties in leaving a cult seem very much like the difficulties some people might have in leaving an abusive partnership.
Very much so, similar dynamics definitely. As I recovered from my time in a cult group, it helped me quite a bit to read books not only on cult recovery specifically - but also info on domestic violence, verbal abuse, sociopaths, manipulation, con artists, and on scams/consumer fraud.
"Cold reading" is a good thing to know about too:
http://www.skepdic.com/coldread.htmlSurvivors of both one on one abusive relationships and of destructive groups may think "how could I have been that stupid?", may feel that there must be something wrong with them, and unfortunately outsiders will also tend to think anyone who has been victimized surely must just be dumb. But this blames the victim and isn't even true. Cult groups thrive on having many intelligent members.
So the fact we were sucked in doesn't mean we were or are stupid, it means we were tricked (often at a vulnerable time in our lives) and snared.
Cult leaders, new age frauds, scam artists, and predators all use similar forms of manipulation and abuse. They may vary in what style they use, what pose they strike, how they dress up the illusion, but the underpinnings have a lot in common.
Leaving a cult group is very like getting out of an abusive domestic relationship. Can feel miserable, uncomfortable, even frightening - but freedom is worth it all.