Thursday, August 25, 2011

Hot and Even Hotter

Here's an example of a couple of things:
  • You can come out of a cult messed up and still kick ass.
  • SRF is a wacky and destructive cult but by no means the only one.
  • The emotional toll from a cult experience is pretty similar no matter which cult you came from.
  • To get our of a cult, you don't need to pen a resignation letter or have a final exit meeting with your captors where they guilt you, insult you and otherwise describe what a lowlife you are:  you have to pack up as much of your stuff as possible and GET THE FUCK OUT OF THERE AS FAST AS YOU CAN, AS FAR AWAY AS YOU CAN.
  • And don't broadcast your plans to anyone but the people outside who will help you.

Rose McGowan kicks ass in several ways:

This is one of them

However as an ex-cult member who has not only survived but thrived,  you have to admit Rose McGowan has become a lot more than just another hot actress.



Rose McGowan’s Childhood Escape from Cult


Photo: Jon kopaloff/Filmmagic.com
Rose McGowan is best known for her butt-kicking roles in "Scream," "Grindhouse," and, most recently, "Conan the Barbarian." But in the recent issue of People magazine, the outspoken actress went into detail about a real-life battle far scarier than any movie.
McGowan, 38, spoke with People about how she spent her childhood in the Children of God cult. The sect is a "polygamous cult that blended free-love attitudes with Christian proselytizing." At age nine she escaped the cult with her father after he became fearful that Rose might be sexually abused.
While in the cult, McGowan tells People she was often either angry or terrified. "You weren't allowed to have imperfections," she explained. "I had a little wart on my thumb, and I remember walking down this hallway -- a door opened and some adult grabbed me and just cut it off with a razor blade and stuck me back out in the hallway with it still bleeding."
McGowan also describes watching how the men in the cult treated the women. "At a very early age I decided I did not want to be like those women. They were basically there to serve the men sexually -- you were allowed to have more than one wife." The cult's women would sometimes travel to area bars to try to recruit, an act known as "flirty fishing."
McGowan's father realized he had to leave when he was asked to draw cartoon literature that advocated child-adult sexual relationships. Soon after, Rose, her father, and some siblings left the cult in the middle of the night. They hid in a stone house, and avoided the cult members who came looking for them. "I remember a man trying to break in with a hammer," McGowan said. The Children of God sect has since been renamed The Family International and has "renounced its advocacy of sexual sharing" and adult-minor sexual relationships.
Eventually, McGowan settled with her father in Washington, where they worked on their relationship. "We became really close when he was diagnosed with pulmonary fibrosis at age 60," she said. Her father died in 2008. Today, she is close with her siblings, who she describes as "the most together, offbeat, funny, regular-ish people." Her mom is also happily married.
But McGowan has no illusions that things could have ended very differently. "As strong as I like to think I've always been, I'm sure I could have been broken. I know I got out by the skin of my teeth."
For the full article, pick up the September 5, 2011 issue of People magazine.

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