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Topics - Mel

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1
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / AARC Protest
« on: June 06, 2009, 01:24:51 PM »
I wasn't aware of the protest until the night it happened, otherwise I could have been there!

Can anybody fill us in on how it went? How many protesters? Media turn out? Impact?

2
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / Court ORders to AARC
« on: March 21, 2009, 11:46:51 AM »
Does anybody know of any judges other than Judge Stanhope who have court ordered somebody to AARC? And what (if any) other judges attend AARC functions or are affiliated in some way?

3
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / A Message to Parents
« on: February 15, 2009, 01:08:50 PM »
Lastnight I had about a 3 hour conversation with my mother after we'd both seen The Fifth Estate. The show was hard to watch for all of us - whether you are currently a part of AARC or are speaking against it. My mother is wrapping her head around it still and doing the right thing by speaking with uninvolved people to get some perspective from them. I imagine it's very hard for a parent to understand because they weren't in the center the way that we were, and also hard to accept that they may have placed their child in a facility of us.

I highly suggest to go back to advice most parents have heard from the get go - which is talk to your kid & listen. Ask open questions and let them do most of the talking. Sit down in a comfortable place and ask them about what they think of it without giving your perspective first. It doesn't matter if you plan on attending an Open Meeting right after the graduation, what will it hurt to have a long open conversation that has no motives other than connecting with one another?

The show stirred up emotions in everyone, and it's personally benefited my family to let them all spill out.

I'm neither a parent nor a counselor, but if I can connect honestly with my mother, anybody can!

4
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / Why are you fighting?
« on: July 06, 2008, 08:47:20 PM »
So I was on Step 1 for 3 months. Something that was said to me repeatedly, specifically by Andrew Morton was "Why are you fighting? If you're not an alcoholic, you wouldn't fight giving it up". Of course I'd only drank once, but that's besides the point. If I wasn't an alcoholic I should be okay with admitting all that I'd done before AARC was wrong, and a life of AA is better.

I would like the AARC staffers to try if they would to use that same mentality on themselves. If you are not brainwashed, then why fight life outside of AARC? Why fight everything that is said here? Why react in anger to a post regarding a murder and defend abuse like denial of bathroom privileges - which weren't even mentioned in the post? If you are not dependant on AARC and the AARC community, why not take some time away from it and be open minded to a different way of life?

If you are truly a recovering addict or alcoholic, what does your "recovery" depend upon? If you don't attend a meeting, will you crumble?

5
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / Dealing With Shame
« on: February 19, 2008, 02:37:34 AM »
A snippet of something I wrote to myself a while back. If this were a rap a peer would say now "Can anyone relate to this girl?" and you all would have to put your hands up.

"Drinking a cup of coffee on my living room sofa at 7:00 AM, watching The Today Show this morning, I was overcome with happiness.

During the early mornings in The Host Homes, under slept and emotionally exhausted, we as Newcomers would be pushed aside for a moment, while we observed the closest thing to normal happenings of our Host Home families. Our Host Home mother serves us breakfast and then quickly empties out the dishwasher and cleans the counter tops, a practice she does so naturally we know she’s been doing it since marriage. Our Host Home siblings listen to the radio in their rooms while dressing themselves for school, and fuss about homework while packing their backpacks. Our Host Home father comes downstairs last in his suit, and stands in the kitchen with his cup of coffee, readying himself for another long day of holding up in the business world and then coming home to AARC and all of us.

This is where I longed for the outside world the most. In two Host Homes I can think of, our Host Fathers would break the rule of no television and turn on the news as they ate breakfast. While the home was buzzing with the normal commotion of assuring that Newcomers spent no longer than five minutes in the bathroom, and that no others slip away while one of us is in there, the sound of the morning news brought a level of normalcy to our situation. In the mornings I was aware that all around us were homes filled with families, tired and dragging themselves out of bed, brewing up coffee, and listening to the sound of The Today Show while beginning their new day. All around us were normal families going about their normal lives, not for one moment having any idea of what was going on in our home.

And when we drove to the centre, early in the mornings before the sun had come up, I would be looking into the windows of every home we passed and imagining their normal lives, in their warm homes, which would smell like toast and coffee just like the Host Home I’d come from. Whether their blinds were closed but I could see light behind them, or there was a television set flickering in the dark, whether or not it was an upper class home or a lower class apartment, I wanted more than anything to be inside by that light.  I wanted to make it out of AARC just so that I could experience again waking up without having an Oldcomer’s bed pressed in front of the door, turn on the news, make some coffee, and then sit down and enjoy it; without asking permission. To make the decisions then if I wanted to leave early for work, or if I would call in sick and crawl back into bed, or would I be a student? Whatever I wanted, starting my morning outside of a Host Home and in a home of my own, I would have the freedom to make those decisions, and I would think about everyone out there who didn’t have that freedom.

I picked pieces up from each Host Home on how I would operate my mornings once free; like Car***ne’s mother I would have my coffee pot set on a timer and bring a thermos with me to work. Like G*n*v**ve’s mother I would have royal blue glasses. Like C***y’s father I would let the car begin to warm up fifteen minutes before it was time to go.

So that’s what I do, even when I am once again under slept, or I am overworked, I do this unconsciously. I set my alarm a half an hour early, knowing how important this morning time alone is. Since 1996, since returning home from AARC, I have eaten the same breakfast every day. I’ve gone to great measures to assure that this ritual is undisturbed, while traveling, while camping, I find a way to bring it all with me. No matter what chaos may be erupting in my life I have to have this one thing that stays the same.

So I sit there in the dark under just the light of the TV, knowing what it looks like flickering from the outside. I am filled with gratitude for the peace and quiet of my home, for the freedom of having for breakfast whatever I please, for the freedom to watch the television, for knowing that I have one more day where I will not undergo psychological torture. Even when I have had next to nothing, even when I was homeless, I was thankful for everything that I have; which is that every morning that I can sit with my coffee and not be forced anywhere is total freedom to make any decision.

One Sunday A*d**w arranged for all of us to drive out to a family members home on a farm, where there was a hill to toboggan on. It was a long drive through gravel roads in the middle of nowhere, where the sun reflected brightly off of untouched snow, something which in normal circumstances I would find beautiful, but in such a situation the snow only reminded me of what I was trapped in.

I was in his girlfriend’s mini van with some of my group members, who spoke very little during the trip (taking advantage of an unusual amount of freedom of thought). She played a Blue Rodeo CD, which reminded me of my fathers Patsy Cline tapes he’d played in his van in my youth. The CD must have repeated several times on the way to the farm house. Later on Peter played the song “Try” from the same CD for my Step One Progress Rap. Recently I found myself wanting to hear those songs again out of respect for music that brought me comfort in such an awful time.

Now I get into my car; my nice car, and every morning I am surprised to be in it. Not for one second do I take for granted that my car doesn’t need to be started fifteen minutes in advance in order to be warm, or how smoothly it takes its corners. Every morning when I get in it I give thanks, for I still feel as I did in AARC, that it will be forever before I am one of those people waking up every day to head off to a normal world.

I stop at stoplights and more often than not I find a suit in the car next to me looking over at the made up blonde in the nice car, most likely wondering what the story is behind her. They don’t know that under my jacket I am heavily tattooed, or that I still attend raves. They see a woman in a Club Monaco coat drinking from a Starbucks thermos, and they think I’m one of them. They have no idea that I once had to confess for having acted on my Defect of Pride when in a rush to complete my chores I couldn’t successfully sweep up 100% of the spilled coffee grounds in the staff’s kitchen. In my five years of living in this suburb I have yet to meet another person who was not born into the lap of luxury, which in my eyes is anyone who was able to live at home until they could afford rent for themselves. They do not know, when they look at me at the stoplight, how foreign it is for someone like myself to be sitting there in that car.

This morning, inside my warm car on a cold morning reminiscent of Calgary of course, I
listened to that Blue Rodeo CD (Care of Amazon. Do you know how hard it is to find a Blue Rodeo CD in America?). It certainly did bring up some old feelings of AARC. “I feel like a stranger in another world/but at least I’m living again”.

I don’t know if it should be considered sad or amazing that I have this acute memory of what it’s like to be imprisoned, and such a gratitude for freedom. Regardless, I know that I have a love for living which the suit in the car next to me most likely does not have.

For the longest time, telling someone about what I’d gone through was a terrifying experience. I couldn’t do it without tears. There was so much fear in revealing my secret. I was already the odd girl out. In life in general I’ve danced to my own drummer, and coercing others to look beyond the differences and take me for who I am has been a task. To reveal in one conversation that I had been brainwashed and kidnapped set me further apart from the rest. You don’t want to be an outsider. You don’t want to have a traumatic experience that nobody you know can relate to.

And then there is all this crap that you’ve been fed to believe. You are a manipulative druggie; nobody will believe you. You are whining and looking for pitty. You are fighting. There is all this crap that even when you know it is wrong, once you bundle up the courage to tell the person you’ve been working with for one year what you’ve gone through, at the top of your throat this stuff seems to stop you and tell you that you can’t take the risk or she may turn on you. You fear that when your friends learn what a bizarre experience you’ve gone through that they will say to one another “I had no idea she was so fucked up!”

You tell yourself that the best thing you can do is go on like it never happened, and hope that something bad enough happens that will put an end to AARC without you having to do anything. When you try to talk about it, you feel like you’re in Rap again; going into a regressive and painful state. You don’t want to go back to “a time and place when…”

But I worked at it slowly. At first with a therapist, in whom I found immediately out of AARC, and then with some authorities. And then periodically off and on over the years, and then on these pages. I told bits and pieces to those closest to me, learning slowly what I was emotionally able to reveal and what I was not, sometimes diving too deep and bursting into tears abruptly with friends perhaps not close enough to me to fully understand why.

Then it occurred to me on one of my half hour drives to work, that in the end all abuse is the same. The words “cult”, “brainwashing”, and “programming” are intimidating, but the shame I seemed to feel over what had happened to me was no different than anyone else’s. A co-worker had recently revealed to me that she was a victim of incest, and I’d questioned why it was that people felt shame over sexual abuse. Here is something so clearly done to a person and not by them, and strictly because sex is a taboo subject in our society they become too afraid to report their abuser, when most likely they wouldn’t blink about reporting someone for having mugged them.

Yet there I was, ashamed of what I had been put through, for no reason. I was not a drug addict who deserved to loose their rights in punishment for my sick behavior, and make amends to my parents for having harmed them and cost them so much money. I did not do anything to ask for AARC, or for Münchhausen's to happen to me, yet I didn’t want to tell anybody that it had. I hadn’t recognized it as shame. I saw it as complicated.

This encouraged me now. I would not hide from a co-worker if I had been mugged, so why wouldn’t I be able to tell a co-worker I had been programmed?

And this realization united me. I don’t know if the man or the Soccer Mom in the car next to me has ever been through something quite like I have, but I know that many of my daily crawl traffic companions have undergone abuse or a trauma of some kind, and for all of them it is hard to discuss. None of us wanted it to happen, all of us feel separated from the rest for having gone through it, and all of us would rather be thinking of something better than our traumatic event. The severities of our experiences may vary, but the bullshit telling us to lay low about it is the same...."

6
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / The Difference between AARC and Kids
« on: January 13, 2008, 10:15:48 PM »
Because in other threads people are discussing the similarities between AARC and Kids, I thought I'd pass on the differences that I was told when in AARC. Here is what we were told about Kids when I was there:

Kids starved clients.

Kids didn't get to have Sunday's in the Host Homes.

There were far more clients in Kids.

Restraining was used more frequently in Raps.

Someone with a physical disability could not progress in Kids ever (while AARC had never admitted anyone with a physical disability).

AARC does not use "T.B.B" (talking behind back).


We most commonly heard about Kids via Peter S. who was a former victim of Kids then went on to become a "clinical" in AARC. He typically shared horror stories about only being fed 1 Shreddie a day, in order to make us more "grateful" for AARC. He didn't share anything about Newton or the make up of the program, and for some reason referred to it as "Kids of New Jersey" Not North Jersey or Bergan County.

AARC members believe that those forms of abuse listed above are what made Kids wrong. We were told that victims of Kids were brainwashed, but there was no mention of what that meant or how it happened, just the above abuses. AARC victims do not want to think that being overfed, being encouraged to restrain people to keep them safe, or staying up until the wee hours of the morning for Open Meeting, make AARC almost identical to Kids.

7
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / A Challenge
« on: December 25, 2007, 05:35:07 PM »
Like most of us, I am definitely thinking of AARC and those who are in AARC on Christmas right now. While it's a solemn day in AARC knowing the rest of your friends and family are having a normal holiday, I'm glad to know that the kids in AARC right now are not in a Rap, and are most likely having a far easier day than most. Newcomers will have some supervised time with their parents at a dinner table, if the rules are still the same.

I was reading about helping cult members today, and how communication like we have on this board where we are straight forward in saying "You are in a cult, you are brainwashed, your leader is misleading you" only causes the cult member to become more defensive of their cult. I was interested this morning in asking the AARC staff who post on this board, what it is they think when they watch the film or trailer for "over the GW", but then I answered myself. They will not see the similarities and question what it is they do. They will become afraid and then pick out the very minor differences and feel justified that they are enough to make AARC different - it will fuel their belief that AARC is the one and only place to truly heal drug addicts. Isn't that what you believe guys? Name one other "treatment centre" for youth which you feel is equal to or better than AARC.

What I would like to do today though is plant a seed in your heads regarding the amount of jargon and negativity that is used in AARC. I am a strong believer in choosing words carefully, and speaking in a positive manner. I know that you believe that directing anger at Newcomers, or your stressing your disapproval in them helps them, and I know that you can't take a day off from doing that, but I could ask you to try and do this one thing: Tomorrow when back in Rap's again, try to go one entire day without using the following words:

Hurt'n
Pathetic
Bullshit
con
martyr
"pitty pot"
Druggie
weasel
Kiss Ass
struggl'n/struggle
Defect
"deadinsaneorinjail"
Insane/Insanity

Good Luck.

8
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / Talks
« on: November 06, 2007, 02:39:46 PM »
Hey everyone, there has been a lot of talk about reporting abuse, protesting and so on. I am often asked why so many people don't speak up about what happened to them and I have been thinking about that a lot lately.

When I was still halfway programmed, preaching the word, and  in constant contact with AARC people, I did try to report some of the abuse (as odd as that may sound to some people). I was met with a lot of sympathy, but little action was taken to react to what I was telling everyone. I did not go directly to the police because I did not trust them, which was a mistake but at the same time I think back then the police wouldn't have done much to help me either.

I was constantly afraid of my parents finding out that I was turning in AARC. They were still programmed (and still are), and when I had revealed to them all that went on outside of parent rap, they excused all of it believing it was all done for a good cause. If I continued to speak badly about AARC that meant I had "gone back" to my "past" and that I would relapse - "deadinsaneorinjail". I did not care if my parents disliked me, but I did fear that once again they would restrain me and drag me away, and I'd be in AARC for another year or more again. It was something I feared constantly through the rest of my teen years.

I have been thinking about the most "normal" of AARC parents, the ones who I am surprised ever bought into it. I had never had a true bond to my parents. I can not imagine how hard it must be to actually have love for your parents, and to fear at the same time them betraying you all over again, or turning against you entirely because you've abandoned AARC's ways. Even as an adult, if your family is programmed and you are not, you risk loosing the family you love entirely because you've been honest. That must be very hard for a lot of graduates.

If you look at former members of cults who's leader was exposed for having mislead them, and the group is dispersed, members usually question their beliefs and move on.

It is totally doable to to take action against the abuse you suffered or were aware of, and to remain secretive from your family. In time though, I hope nobody has to feel that way.

9
News Items / How I've survived it
« on: May 01, 2007, 10:27:57 PM »
Each of us in AARC, or Kids, or whichever of this chain you were a part of, had some sort of safe place we went to in our heads to forget about where we were. I think we can all remember where we would have rather been at that time - when we were teenagers and our idea of bliss was probably very different from what it is for us now. I know exactly who was on my mind when I would scream in my mind for help hoping my calls could be felt by my friends out there. I remember very well what I dreamed about doing with my life the moment I got out.

At night in bed (the only time we had to think) I would fantasize about dancing with all of my friends in some extravagant nightclub, in extravagant clothes in which I'd design in my mind down to the smallest details, and which I still remember. I knew what music we'd be dancing to, and the lighting, and I would get lost in the music.  That may sound like a very simple dream to most - dancing - but if I'd told anyone in AARC I wanted to dance in a nightclub with my old friends I'd have been told that my disease was taking over me and I'd be held back. I was 15 and the idea of dancing and dressing freely was a freedom which seemed a million miles away.

There is a song by VNV Nation called "Chrome" which has always reminded me of T*ny* W. I translate the lyrics funny, but there is a line "I still hear you scream in every breathe, in every waking moment" and it reminded me of how vividly I remember the look and sound of her screaming in a Girls Rap. I then remembered her and I sneaking into a private room every morning when we were Oldtimers, getting on our knees, holding hands, and praying for ourselves and the Newcomers. The song made me think about her still being in that room, all these years later.

Now over the years I've done a lot of things to help heal the wound AARC left. Therapy, research, taking action, these forums, facing the family, life changes, and just about every type of spiritual or holistic healing under the sun. But over the past few years I found the most obvious of cure: I design my clothes, I get together with my friends, and then we hit extravagant clubs and we dance all night. It started as an accident on my anniversary of my kidnapping and I realized I'd forgotten all about it and just had a good time, so I've made it a part of my weekly routine just like working out and getting the groceries.

Recently I was dancing at a VNV show, and when Chrome came on I got teary eyed with happiness. I was reminded of how badly I wanted to be free when we would prey together, and how now I am where I wanted to be. For many years I always felt as though I were still trapped somehow, no matter what good things may have come my way.

I know this is a long post, but rarely do people here share what things are like on the other side. I am very sad and angry about what everyone else is still going through, but I don't feel pain for myself anymore. I never denied myself the anger over what happened, so I've dealt with it all of these years. Now if I have a day with some spare time I sometimes ask myself "What would I have wanted to do then?" It could be just sleep, or watch TV, or have silence, or put on make up, but whatever it is I go and do it and I feel satisfied.

In light of the "Lest We Forget" post, I think that it's important to know how some of us survived, and how those of us who have gotten through the thick of it feel now. I'd like to invite more survivors to share their stories.

10
Straight, Inc. and Derivatives / My story (again)
« on: April 24, 2007, 12:42:22 AM »
I posted this a long time ago on the "Straights Testimony" forum, but the forum was taken down. Fortunately I saved it so I didn't have to re-type all of this! For those of you who missed it, this is (in as short as I could possibly make it) my story of how I got in and out of AARC.

"My name is Mylitta and I was in the Alberta Adolescent Recovery Centre (AARC) for a little over one year. My mother's aunt and uncle had put their child through Kids of North Jersey, and even though she was freed from "Kids" by the police her parents continued to support the program. When Miller Newton tried to bring his program to Canada they offered their help, and began holding "Rap's" in their basement, which were run by Dean Vause. This is where AARC began until they were given funding to buy a building in the industrial area of Calgary.

When I was 13 I smoked pot about 30 times (probably less) and took LSD about 10 times. I did this because I attended the high school with the highest drug population in Canada at the time and drugs were "normal" there. After using drugs for almost a year I became bored with them and I had negative effects from LSD, so I stopped entirely. When asked "why did your parents put you through AARC" I've come to understand that I was in AARC because of Munchausen by proxy (MBP), which is what my mother had.

My mother claims that the 9 months she spent in a psychiatric unit after slitting her wrists was the "happiest time" in her life. She claims to have been cured of schizophrenia while in there. I'm aware that she has a  head injury from childhood which caused her brain damage, but not aware of any diagnosis she was given in the psychiatric unit. I do know that she moved to another country and changed her first and last name, and I believe that there is a possibility that she was under Witness Protection. After much time questioning her I've come to suspect that she'd slit her wrists while on LSD which was her "schizophrenia" and also why she focused so much on me having taken it.

When my father began seeing other women, the only thing that would bring him home was if my sister and I were very sick. So I spent most of my childhood in hospitals and she even pulled strings to make me the poster child (literally) for a disease. I was heavily medicated for reasons I don't understand and on a weekly basis I was coaxed into situations with doctors where she would tell me what my symptoms were and if I were "good" I would tell the doctors. I was even burnt and cut as a child to go to the emergency room. I was lead to believe that they were accidents. Even as a small toddler if I had a bad dream my mother would tell me it was a hallucination and drag me to a psychologist where she would tell them I had schizophrenia.

When I was 14 my father was spending the mortgage on prostitutes. My mother spent time with the aunt and uncle involved with AARC, and soon decided that she needed to send me there. Her and my mother both spent time in Calgary attending meetings at AARC, which I was unaware of. When they returned they were increasingly crazy. It was summer time and I was spending a lot of time with my friends, hanging out at the beach, coffee shops, etc. I was not using drugs, being promiscuous, or doing anything "at risk". I was emotionally struggling, but that is a given considering my home situation. Once they began attending AARC they made a rule that I could only leave the house for 1 hour a day. They didn't chose a home with a bedroom for me, so my home was under the dining room table. After a week of only exciting the dining room table for an hour a day I began running away from home, often being dragged back (physically) by police or my parents. As a run away I spent most of my time in friends home, and met a woman who began fighting for legal custody of me, but unfortunately I spent a small time homeless because my parents were knocking on the doors of my friends homes and threatening their parents. During this summer my mother had me physically restrained and taken to a rehabilitation center in the states. I was soon released and social services (I learned years later) decided to watch me and arrest my mother if she continued with this.

Eventually, after my "normal" life was being torn to pieces, my parents told me that they'd found a foster program in Alberta that had space for me and that they would be willing to let me go if I chose to live with that foster family. I said yes, believing it was the only way to stop the fight with my family. Two days later they took me to the center where I'd supposedly meet my family, and I was in AARC.

Being this the most bizarre experience of my life it will be hard to keep the explanation of AARC short.

At the time the industrial garage AARC was in was mostly cement walls and floor, with some areas having painted gray walls and gray carpets. The only decorated part of the building was the front portion where staff had their offices and curious parents learned about AARC. Also everything beyond the front of the building was not heated during the winter and the air conditioning was turned up in the back during the summer. We weren't allowed to wear our coats in Rap's and only allowed one sweatshirt or sweater and a few t-shirts, so I was always freezing and had cold sweats. The blinds were shut so that we didn't get any sunlight, and we were not allowed any outside stimulation such as newspapers or any literature for that matter that was not AA literature, or any contact with people not directly involved with AARC. When I left AARC I was unaware of major events such as the Oklahoma bombing.

Many of my civil rights were violated. I wasn't given the right to partake in ceremonies of my own religion and I was even forbidden to speak of my religious beliefs because they differed from AARC's. Mail that friends sent to my mother she'd hand over to AARC and they would open them and read them, but not tell me about them. I discovered this as an “Oldtimer”. I had no way of contacting anyone for help because I wasn't allowed to use a phone, have computer access, or write letters. The only time I was allowed to speak to my parents was with Oldtimers and staff monitoring us.

AARC staff told us that legally they could keep us until we were 16 and could sign ourselves out. Anyone who attempted to leave while under the age of sixteen was physically restrained by staff and Oldcomers, including being sat on for long periods of time.

The process of rap's was traumatizing. What had an even worse long term effect on me was being denied time to be silent in between Rap’s. I had to be busy and talking at all times between Raps, otherwise I’d be accused of thinking something bad.

Clients had to tell "incidents" during every rap, so I don't know what was made up for the sake of an incident, or what was real, but I heard awful stories of incest, sexual abuse, rape, physical abuse, things that at that young age (15) I was unaware of and did not want to be forced to hear extreme details of every day for hours at a time for one year. "Girls Rap" was intended for purely sexual discussion. It was usually run by a man and it was held in a room built with a viewing room behind a one way mirror which continues to disgust me. I remember Girls Rap's where girls told stories of being raped, and instead of being counseled to understand that it was not their fault they were told that their "disease" lead them to it. One 14 year old girl was told that because she’d attended a high school party unconsciously to search out alcohol and feed her disease, so therefore she’d set herself up to be raped. There were child prostitutes (as young as 13) who had been court ordered into AARC and even though these girls were recruited by gangs, drugged and raped, they were still taught that they became prostitutes to support their addiction. Anyone who had homosexual thoughts was told that it was because of their "disease" and they could not progress to the next level in AARC until accepting this and changing their behavior.

All of us spent time undergoing "blast raps" or being the "target" of regular raps, which involved everyone (staff and clients) calling you names, telling you that you're a worthless druggie, for hours and hours at a time, and the only way to make it end is to agree with them which is called "accepting powerlessness". If you didn't accept powerlessness for a long period of time you were put on "The Zero Club" which meant that an Oldcomer was assigned to control even your basic functions, meaning that you had to ask permission for each spoonful of food you were given and the Oldcomer was allowed to deny you. You had to ask for one square of toilet paper at a time, and again the Oldcomer could deny you.  

Undergoing this caused me to being having altered states. I had to have a private place to go to where they could not reach, and I had to have a personality that was acceptable to them. I bounced in between these at all times and by the end of AARC I could not control bouncing in between the real me as a 15 year old, and the AARC me. When I "graduated" I behaved in a perfectly acceptable way to AARC people, but to the rest of the world I was totally out of place which the more I tried to merge into the real world the more obvious this became.

I wasn't eating enough to sustain a healthy weight during my first half of AARC and therefore was in pain all over. Normally clients were taken to a doctor who was a friend of Dean Vause's when first in AARC. Their visit was supervised by staff and the purpose was to check for STD's, lice, and scabies. I wasn't given this doctors appointment, probably because my poor health was too risky. When I became an Oldcomer and had a Host Home my mothers MPB became beneficial. She found that I had a cyst forming from spinal tissue, which needed to be operated on. I was operated on and quickly escorted back to AARC where home nurses visited me 3 times daily to care of the open wound, which soon became infected. A "Clinical" once told me that the home nurse had told her that I was making it all up and didn't need any help, therefore she was no longer letting the nurses in. Meanwhile I could barely walk and had a two inch long open wound and infection in my spinal tissue. My mother found out about this and quickly had the situation changed long enough for me to heal up.

I Graduated AARC by doing my best to abide by the rules and change myself to their ways. I would have been in AARC for much longer than year if it weren’t for one staff member who was dedicated to standing up for me. She helped convince the others that I was one of them, even though I think she knew I never would be.

Immediately after AARC I found a wonderful therapist who helped me start to recover from AARC. She reminded me that I could have my own opinions and that all of the things done to me and the other kids were not for a good reason. It was still a few years before I cut contact with AARC because I continued to bounce between the real me and the AARC me, and I was afraid that maybe outsiders really were evil, and maybe I really would be "dead insane or in jail" (as we were told) if I separated from AARC. I also continued to support my mom and her MBP until I turned 18, at which point I felt free legally that I couldn't be dragged into a rehab, hospital, or cult. I moved away and limited contact with my immediate family.

The most surprising things to have learned about AARC for me were first of all that the rule of turning 16 and signing out was false and that AARC at the time did not have the legal right to keep me or restrain us, which means that I was actually kidnapped and illegally held. Also we had called Dean Vause "Dr. Vause" because he claimed to have been a psychologist to us, while professionally to the outside world he referred to himself as "clinical director". I was shocked to find that he is not a psychologist and had undergone his training at Kids of North Jersey. Also I began reading about cults and cult recovery, and it feels to me that AARC's program is so alike all descriptions of what makes a cult, that it's possible they designed the program intentionally around the makings of a cult. I could not believe that these books about cults worded exactly what I went through.

At 20 I had gotten my dream apartment and had married my husband who helped me put things into perspective. I'd still say some AARC things or refer to myself as "sick" in the way that both AARC and my mother would, and he'd ask me why on earth I thought those things. I realized that I was not ill throughout my life mentally or physically. At 22 I'd moved even further from my family and researched my mothers history where I was able to fill in some blanks. I felt safer to have a clearer understanding of my life. Around that time the MBP became clear. Living in fear of AARC, or "deadinsaneorinjail", seeing myself as a bad or dangerous person was gone. I was able to be a woman with her own life, her own values, and no more bouncing in between who I was and who I was told to be. I'm now 25 and lead a full life, although it has been much harder to get here then it is for most people.

When I listen to my friends talking about their lives I am always amazed at how different our stories are. I am often jealous of students who were able to stay with their parents while attending school or who have a safety net if they can't make their rent one month. I've had to do everything while working overtime, and I've never had that safety net to fall back on (until in laws came along). At 19 I was exhausted all the time, working around the clock to make it, knowing that if one little thing went wrong, like if I got a sick and had to take a week off, I might not be able to pay my bills and I'd be on the streets. Also, I am always aware of how much someone can torture an innocent person, which is something I know that most North American’s don’t live with every day. The pain that my parents brought is very minimal in comparison to the traumatic effects that AARC had on me, and I lost any innocence because of it.

I saw my family recently. My mother is now unable to care for herself, I don't know exactly what the reasoning is. She is starving herself and so underweight that she could probably die any second. I don't think she is doing it for the sake of vanity, I think that now that she doesn't have someone to make sick, she has to do it herself. She typically sees a doctor once a day, and again I don't know why.

From what I hear about AARC these days they have dressed the building up and worsened the situation for its clients. I don't believe that there is any way to improve AARC. The amount of violence engraved in the staff members is too powerful to cure. I'd tell you that the only people who should end up in this place are the worst of criminals or rapists, but I remember a situation where a boy had raped one of the girls in AARC, and he did not have to "make amends" to her while she was being taught she was the problem. I feel that there are probably many kids out there who were abused enough in AARC to press criminal charges, but they are either too afraid or too confused about what happened to talk about it. Most of the victims I speak to are working so hard to change their lives and get away from anything involved with AARC that they simply say "I just can't deal with it right now."

I will always live with the knowledge that I lost one year of my youth during one of our most developmental years. When freed from AARC I heard about a local man I'd known who was arrested for sexually assaulting his 2 daughters (both under the age of 12). He spent only 3 months in prison where he was allowed all civil rights, time to himself, and outside contact. Meanwhile everything had been taken from me and I wasn't even allowed to speak about the people I'd loved before AARC. I strongly disagree with any “treatment program” that does not offer a fair trail before sentencing someone. But I also strongly disagree that AARC or any of its like programs should continued to be called “treatment”. “The AARC Family” is a psychological/religious community, and should only be seen as such."

11
News Items / My story (again)
« on: April 24, 2007, 12:40:16 AM »
I posted this a long time ago on the "Straights Testimony" forum, but the forum was taken down. Fortunately I saved it so I didn't have to re-type all of this! For those of you who missed it, this is (in as short as I could possibly make it) my story of how I got in and out of AARC.

"My name is Mylitta and I was in the Alberta Adolescent Recovery Centre (AARC) for a little over one year. My mother's aunt and uncle had put their child through Kids of North Jersey, and even though she was freed from "Kids" by the police her parents continued to support the program. When Miller Newton tried to bring his program to Canada they offered their help, and began holding "Rap's" in their basement, which were run by Dean Vause. This is where AARC began until they were given funding to buy a building in the industrial area of Calgary.

When I was 13 I smoked pot about 30 times (probably less) and took LSD about 10 times. I did this because I attended the high school with the highest drug population in Canada at the time and drugs were "normal" there. After using drugs for almost a year I became bored with them and I had negative effects from LSD, so I stopped entirely. When asked "why did your parents put you through AARC" I've come to understand that I was in AARC because of Munchausen by proxy (MBP), which is what my mother had.

My mother claims that the 9 months she spent in a psychiatric unit after slitting her wrists was the "happiest time" in her life. She claims to have been cured of schizophrenia while in there. I'm aware that she has a  head injury from childhood which caused her brain damage, but not aware of any diagnosis she was given in the psychiatric unit. I do know that she moved to another country and changed her first and last name, and I believe that there is a possibility that she was under Witness Protection. After much time questioning her I've come to suspect that she'd slit her wrists while on LSD which was her "schizophrenia" and also why she focused so much on me having taken it.

When my father began seeing other women, the only thing that would bring him home was if my sister and I were very sick. So I spent most of my childhood in hospitals and she even pulled strings to make me the poster child (literally) for a disease. I was heavily medicated for reasons I don't understand and on a weekly basis I was coaxed into situations with doctors where she would tell me what my symptoms were and if I were "good" I would tell the doctors. I was even burnt and cut as a child to go to the emergency room. I was lead to believe that they were accidents. Even as a small toddler if I had a bad dream my mother would tell me it was a hallucination and drag me to a psychologist where she would tell them I had schizophrenia.

When I was 14 my father was spending the mortgage on prostitutes. My mother spent time with the aunt and uncle involved with AARC, and soon decided that she needed to send me there. Her and my mother both spent time in Calgary attending meetings at AARC, which I was unaware of. When they returned they were increasingly crazy. It was summer time and I was spending a lot of time with my friends, hanging out at the beach, coffee shops, etc. I was not using drugs, being promiscuous, or doing anything "at risk". I was emotionally struggling, but that is a given considering my home situation. Once they began attending AARC they made a rule that I could only leave the house for 1 hour a day. They didn't chose a home with a bedroom for me, so my home was under the dining room table. After a week of only exciting the dining room table for an hour a day I began running away from home, often being dragged back (physically) by police or my parents. As a run away I spent most of my time in friends home, and met a woman who began fighting for legal custody of me, but unfortunately I spent a small time homeless because my parents were knocking on the doors of my friends homes and threatening their parents. During this summer my mother had me physically restrained and taken to a rehabilitation center in the states. I was soon released and social services (I learned years later) decided to watch me and arrest my mother if she continued with this.

Eventually, after my "normal" life was being torn to pieces, my parents told me that they'd found a foster program in Alberta that had space for me and that they would be willing to let me go if I chose to live with that foster family. I said yes, believing it was the only way to stop the fight with my family. Two days later they took me to the center where I'd supposedly meet my family, and I was in AARC.

Being this the most bizarre experience of my life it will be hard to keep the explanation of AARC short.

At the time the industrial garage AARC was in was mostly cement walls and floor, with some areas having painted gray walls and gray carpets. The only decorated part of the building was the front portion where staff had their offices and curious parents learned about AARC. Also everything beyond the front of the building was not heated during the winter and the air conditioning was turned up in the back during the summer. We weren't allowed to wear our coats in Rap's and only allowed one sweatshirt or sweater and a few t-shirts, so I was always freezing and had cold sweats. The blinds were shut so that we didn't get any sunlight, and we were not allowed any outside stimulation such as newspapers or any literature for that matter that was not AA literature, or any contact with people not directly involved with AARC. When I left AARC I was unaware of major events such as the Oklahoma bombing.

Many of my civil rights were violated. I wasn't given the right to partake in ceremonies of my own religion and I was even forbidden to speak of my religious beliefs because they differed from AARC's. Mail that friends sent to my mother she'd hand over to AARC and they would open them and read them, but not tell me about them. I discovered this as an “Oldtimer”. I had no way of contacting anyone for help because I wasn't allowed to use a phone, have computer access, or write letters. The only time I was allowed to speak to my parents was with Oldtimers and staff monitoring us.

AARC staff told us that legally they could keep us until we were 16 and could sign ourselves out. Anyone who attempted to leave while under the age of sixteen was physically restrained by staff and Oldcomers, including being sat on for long periods of time.

The process of rap's was traumatizing. What had an even worse long term effect on me was being denied time to be silent in between Rap’s. I had to be busy and talking at all times between Raps, otherwise I’d be accused of thinking something bad.

Clients had to tell "incidents" during every rap, so I don't know what was made up for the sake of an incident, or what was real, but I heard awful stories of incest, sexual abuse, rape, physical abuse, things that at that young age (15) I was unaware of and did not want to be forced to hear extreme details of every day for hours at a time for one year. "Girls Rap" was intended for purely sexual discussion. It was usually run by a man and it was held in a room built with a viewing room behind a one way mirror which continues to disgust me. I remember Girls Rap's where girls told stories of being raped, and instead of being counseled to understand that it was not their fault they were told that their "disease" lead them to it. One 14 year old girl was told that because she’d attended a high school party unconsciously to search out alcohol and feed her disease, so therefore she’d set herself up to be raped. There were child prostitutes (as young as 13) who had been court ordered into AARC and even though these girls were recruited by gangs, drugged and raped, they were still taught that they became prostitutes to support their addiction. Anyone who had homosexual thoughts was told that it was because of their "disease" and they could not progress to the next level in AARC until accepting this and changing their behavior.

All of us spent time undergoing "blast raps" or being the "target" of regular raps, which involved everyone (staff and clients) calling you names, telling you that you're a worthless druggie, for hours and hours at a time, and the only way to make it end is to agree with them which is called "accepting powerlessness". If you didn't accept powerlessness for a long period of time you were put on "The Zero Club" which meant that an Oldcomer was assigned to control even your basic functions, meaning that you had to ask permission for each spoonful of food you were given and the Oldcomer was allowed to deny you. You had to ask for one square of toilet paper at a time, and again the Oldcomer could deny you.  

Undergoing this caused me to being having altered states. I had to have a private place to go to where they could not reach, and I had to have a personality that was acceptable to them. I bounced in between these at all times and by the end of AARC I could not control bouncing in between the real me as a 15 year old, and the AARC me. When I "graduated" I behaved in a perfectly acceptable way to AARC people, but to the rest of the world I was totally out of place which the more I tried to merge into the real world the more obvious this became.

I wasn't eating enough to sustain a healthy weight during my first half of AARC and therefore was in pain all over. Normally clients were taken to a doctor who was a friend of Dean Vause's when first in AARC. Their visit was supervised by staff and the purpose was to check for STD's, lice, and scabies. I wasn't given this doctors appointment, probably because my poor health was too risky. When I became an Oldcomer and had a Host Home my mothers MPB became beneficial. She found that I had a cyst forming from spinal tissue, which needed to be operated on. I was operated on and quickly escorted back to AARC where home nurses visited me 3 times daily to care of the open wound, which soon became infected. A "Clinical" once told me that the home nurse had told her that I was making it all up and didn't need any help, therefore she was no longer letting the nurses in. Meanwhile I could barely walk and had a two inch long open wound and infection in my spinal tissue. My mother found out about this and quickly had the situation changed long enough for me to heal up.

I Graduated AARC by doing my best to abide by the rules and change myself to their ways. I would have been in AARC for much longer than year if it weren’t for one staff member who was dedicated to standing up for me. She helped convince the others that I was one of them, even though I think she knew I never would be.

Immediately after AARC I found a wonderful therapist who helped me start to recover from AARC. She reminded me that I could have my own opinions and that all of the things done to me and the other kids were not for a good reason. It was still a few years before I cut contact with AARC because I continued to bounce between the real me and the AARC me, and I was afraid that maybe outsiders really were evil, and maybe I really would be "dead insane or in jail" (as we were told) if I separated from AARC. I also continued to support my mom and her MBP until I turned 18, at which point I felt free legally that I couldn't be dragged into a rehab, hospital, or cult. I moved away and limited contact with my immediate family.

The most surprising things to have learned about AARC for me were first of all that the rule of turning 16 and signing out was false and that AARC at the time did not have the legal right to keep me or restrain us, which means that I was actually kidnapped and illegally held. Also we had called Dean Vause "Dr. Vause" because he claimed to have been a psychologist to us, while professionally to the outside world he referred to himself as "clinical director". I was shocked to find that he is not a psychologist and had undergone his training at Kids of North Jersey. Also I began reading about cults and cult recovery, and it feels to me that AARC's program is so alike all descriptions of what makes a cult, that it's possible they designed the program intentionally around the makings of a cult. I could not believe that these books about cults worded exactly what I went through.

At 20 I had gotten my dream apartment and had married my husband who helped me put things into perspective. I'd still say some AARC things or refer to myself as "sick" in the way that both AARC and my mother would, and he'd ask me why on earth I thought those things. I realized that I was not ill throughout my life mentally or physically. At 22 I'd moved even further from my family and researched my mothers history where I was able to fill in some blanks. I felt safer to have a clearer understanding of my life. Around that time the MBP became clear. Living in fear of AARC, or "deadinsaneorinjail", seeing myself as a bad or dangerous person was gone. I was able to be a woman with her own life, her own values, and no more bouncing in between who I was and who I was told to be. I'm now 25 and lead a full life, although it has been much harder to get here then it is for most people.

When I listen to my friends talking about their lives I am always amazed at how different our stories are. I am often jealous of students who were able to stay with their parents while attending school or who have a safety net if they can't make their rent one month. I've had to do everything while working overtime, and I've never had that safety net to fall back on (until in laws came along). At 19 I was exhausted all the time, working around the clock to make it, knowing that if one little thing went wrong, like if I got a sick and had to take a week off, I might not be able to pay my bills and I'd be on the streets. Also, I am always aware of how much someone can torture an innocent person, which is something I know that most North American’s don’t live with every day. The pain that my parents brought is very minimal in comparison to the traumatic effects that AARC had on me, and I lost any innocence because of it.

I saw my family recently. My mother is now unable to care for herself, I don't know exactly what the reasoning is. She is starving herself and so underweight that she could probably die any second. I don't think she is doing it for the sake of vanity, I think that now that she doesn't have someone to make sick, she has to do it herself. She typically sees a doctor once a day, and again I don't know why.

From what I hear about AARC these days they have dressed the building up and worsened the situation for its clients. I don't believe that there is any way to improve AARC. The amount of violence engraved in the staff members is too powerful to cure. I'd tell you that the only people who should end up in this place are the worst of criminals or rapists, but I remember a situation where a boy had raped one of the girls in AARC, and he did not have to "make amends" to her while she was being taught she was the problem. I feel that there are probably many kids out there who were abused enough in AARC to press criminal charges, but they are either too afraid or too confused about what happened to talk about it. Most of the victims I speak to are working so hard to change their lives and get away from anything involved with AARC that they simply say "I just can't deal with it right now."

I will always live with the knowledge that I lost one year of my youth during one of our most developmental years. When freed from AARC I heard about a local man I'd known who was arrested for sexually assaulting his 2 daughters (both under the age of 12). He spent only 3 months in prison where he was allowed all civil rights, time to himself, and outside contact. Meanwhile everything had been taken from me and I wasn't even allowed to speak about the people I'd loved before AARC. I strongly disagree with any “treatment program” that does not offer a fair trail before sentencing someone. But I also strongly disagree that AARC or any of its like programs should continued to be called “treatment”. “The AARC Family” is a psychological/religious community, and should only be seen as such."

12
News Items / My Story with AARC
« on: April 28, 2005, 04:20:00 PM »
I just posted it in the Straight Testemony Forum. Here's the link:

http://fornits.com/wwf/viewtopic.php?to ... forum=20&0

13
My name is Mylitta and I was in the Alberta Adolescent Recovery Centre (AARC) for a little over one year. My mother's aunt and uncle had put their child through Kids of North Jersey, and even though she was freed from "Kids" by the police her parents continued to support the program. When Miller Newton tried to bring his program to Canada they offered their help, and began holding "Rap's" in their basement, which were run by Dean Vause. This is where AARC began until they were given funding to buy a building in the industrial area of Calgary.

When I was 13 I smoked pot about 30 times (probably less) and took LSD about 10 times. I did this because I attended the high school with the highest drug population in Canada at the time and drugs were "normal" there. After using drugs for almost a year I became bored with them and I had negative effects from LSD, so I stopped entirely. When asked "why did your parents put you through AARC" I've come to understand that I was in AARC because of Munchausen by proxy (MBP), which is what my mother had.

My mother claims that the 9 months she spent in a psychiatric unit after slitting her wrists was the "happiest time" in her life. She claims to have been cured of schizophrenia while in there. I'm aware that she has a  head injury from childhood which caused her brain damage, but not aware of any diagnosis she was given in the psychiatric unit. I do know that she moved to another country and changed her first and last name, and I believe that there is a possibility that she was under Witness Protection. After much time questioning her I've come to suspect that she'd slit her wrists while on LSD which was her "schizophrenia" and also why she focused so much on me having taken it.

When my father began seeing other women, the only thing that would bring him home was if my sister and I were very sick. So I spent most of my childhood in hospitals and she even pulled strings to make me the poster child (literally) for a disease. I was heavily medicated for reasons I don't understand and on a weekly basis I was coaxed into situations with doctors where she would tell me what my symptoms were and if I were "good" I would tell the doctors. I was even burnt and cut as a child to go to the emergency room. I was lead to believe that they were accidents. Even as a small toddler if I had a bad dream my mother would tell me it was a hallucination and drag me to a psychologist where she would tell them I had schizophrenia.

When I was 14 my father was spending the mortgage on prostitutes. My mother spent time with the aunt and uncle involved with AARC, and soon decided that she needed to send me there. Her and my father both spent time in Calgary attending meetings at AARC, which I was unaware of. When they returned they were increasingly crazy. It was summer time and I was spending a lot of time with my friends, hanging out at the beach, coffee shops, etc. I was not using drugs, being promiscuous, or doing anything "at risk". I was emotionally struggling, but that is a given considering my home situation. Once they began attending AARC they made a rule that I could only leave the house for 1 hour a day. They didn't chose a home with a bedroom for me, so my home was under the dining room table. After a week of only exiting the dining room table for an hour a day I began running away from home, often being dragged back (physically) by police or my parents. As a runaway I spent most of my time in friends homes, and met a woman who began fighting for legal custody of me, but unfortunately I spent a small time homeless because my parents were knocking on the doors of my friends homes and threatening their parents. During this summer my mother had me physically restrained and taken to a rehabilitation center in the states. I was soon released and social services (I learned years later) decided to watch me and arrest my mother if she continued with this.

Eventually, after my "normal" life was being torn to pieces, my parents told me that they'd found a foster program in Alberta that had space for me and that they would be willing to let me go if I chose to live with that foster family. I said yes, believing it was the only way to stop the fight with my family. Two days later they took me to the center where I'd supposedly meet my family, and I was in AARC.

Being this the most bizarre experience of my life it will be hard to keep the explanation of AARC short.

At the time the industrial garage AARC was in was mostly cement walls and floor, with some areas having painted gray walls and gray carpets. The only decorated part of the building was the front portion where staff had their offices and curious parents learned about AARC. Also everything beyond the front of the building was not heated during the winter and the air conditioning was turned up in the back during the summer. We weren't allowed to wear our coats in Rap's and only allowed one sweatshirt or sweater and a few t-shirts, so I was always freezing and had cold sweats. The blinds were shut so that we didn't get any sunlight, and we were not allowed any outside stimulation such as newspapers or any literature for that matter that was not AA literature, or any contact with people not directly involved with AARC. When I left AARC I was unaware of major events such as the Oklahoma bombing.

Many of my civil rights were violated. I wasn't given the right to partake in ceremonies of my own religion and I was even forbidden to speak of my religious beliefs because they differed from AARC's. Mail that friends sent to my mother she'd hand over to AARC and they would open them and read them, but not tell me about them. I found out as an Oldtimer. I had no way of contacting anyone for help because I wasn't allowed to use a phone, have computer access, or write letters. The only time I was allowed to speak to my parents was with Oldcomers and staff monitoring me.

AARC staff told us that legally they could keep us until we were 16 and could sign ourselves out. Anyone who attempted to leave while under the age of sixteen was physically restrained by staff and oldcomers, including being sat on for long periods of time. I've heard that they now say the same for anyone under the age of 18.

The process of rap's was traumatizing. Clients had to tell "incidents" during every rap, so I don't know what was made up for the sake of an incident, or what was real, but I heard awful stories of incest, sexual abuse, rape, physical abuse, things that at that young age (15) I was unaware of and did not need to be forced to hear extreme details of every day for hours at a time for one year. "Girls Rap" was intended for purely sexual discussion. It was usually run by a man and it was held in a room built with a viewing room behind a one way mirror, which continues to disgust me. I remember Girls Rap's where girls told stories of being raped, and instead of being counseled to understand that it was not their fault, they were told them that their "disease" lead them to it. That they attended a high school party in search of alcohol so therefore they set themselves up for this to happen to them. There were child prostitutes (as young as 13) who had been court ordered into AARC and even though these girls were recruited by gangs, drugged and raped, they were still taught that they became prostitutes to support their addiction. Anyone who had homosexual thoughts was told that it was because of their "disease".

All of us spent time undergoing "blast raps" or being the "target" of regular raps, which involved everyone (staff and clients) calling you names, telling you that you're a worthless druggie, for hours and hours at a time, and the only way to make it end is to agree with them which is called "accepting powerlessness". If you didn't accept powerlessness for a long period of time you were put on "The Zero Club" which meant that an Oldcomer was assigned to control even your basic functions, meaning that you had to ask permission for each spoonful of food you were given and the Oldcomer was allowed to deny you. You had to ask for one square of toilet paper at a time, and again the Oldcomer could deny you.

Undergoing this caused me to start having altered states. I had to have a private place to go to where they could not reach, and I had to have a personality that was acceptable to them. I bounced in between these at all times and by the end of AARC I could not control bouncing in between the real me as a 15 year old, and the AARC me. When I "graduated" I behaved in a perfectly acceptable way to AARC people, but to the rest of the world I was totally out of place, which the more I tried to merge into the real world the more obvious this became.

I wasn't eating enough to sustain a healthy weight during my first half of AARC and therefore was in pain all over. Normally clients were taken to a doctor who was a friend of Dean Vause's, when they first enter AARC. Their visit was supervised by staff and the purpose was to check for STD's, lice and scabies. I wasn't given this doctors appointment, probably because my poor health was too risky. When I became an Oldcomer and had a Host Home my mothers MPB became beneficial. She found that I had a cyst forming from spinal tissue, which needed to be operated on. I was operated on and quickly escorted back to AARC where home nurses visited me 3 times daily to care for the open wound, which soon became infected. A "Clinical" once told me that the home nurse had told her that I was making it all up and didn't need any help, therefore she was no longer letting the nurses in. Meanwhile I could barely walk and had a two inch long open wound and infection in my spinal tissue. My mother found out about this and quickly had the situation changed long enough for me to heal up.

Immediately after AARC I found a wonderful therapist who helped me start to recover from AARC. She reminded me that I could have my own opinions and that all of the things done to me and the other kids were not for a good reason. It was still a few years before I cut contact with AARC because I continued to bounce between the real me and the AARC me, and I was afraid that maybe outsiders really were evil, and maybe I really would be "dead insane or in jail" (as we were told) if I separated from AARC. I also continued to support my mom and her MBP until I turned 18, at which point I felt free legally that I couldn't be dragged into a rehab, hospital, or a cult. I moved away and limited contact with my immediate family.

The most surprising things to have learned about AARC once out were first of all that the rule of turning 16 and signing out was false and that AARC at the time did not have the legal right to keep me or restrain us, which means that I was actually kidnapped and illegally held. Also We had called Dean Vause "Dr. Vause" because he claimed to have been a psychologist to us, while professionally to the outside world he referred to himself as "clinical director". I was shocked to find that he is not a psychologist and had undergone his training at Kids of North Jersey. Also I began reading about cults and cult recovery, and it feels to me that AARC's program is so alike all descriptions of what makes a cult, that it's possible they designed the program around cult structure. I could not believe that these books about cults worded exactly what I went through.

At 20 I had gotten my dream apartment and had married my husband who helped me put things into perspective. I'd still say some AARC things or refer to myself as "sick" in the way that both AARC and my mother would, and he'd ask me why on earth I thought those things. I realized that I was not ill throughout my life mentally or physically. At 22 I'd moved even further from my family and researched my mothers history where I was able to fill in some blanks. I felt safer to have a clearer understanding of my life. Around that time the MBP became clear. Living in fear of AARC, or "deadinsaneorinjail", seeing myself as a bad or dangerous person was gone. I was able to be a woman with her own life, her own values, and no more bouncing in between who I was and who I was told to be. I'm now 25 and lead a full life, although it has been much harder to get here then it is for most people. When I listen to my friends talking about their lives I am always amazed at how different our stories are. I am often jealous of students who were able to stay with their parents while attending school or who have a safety net if they can't make their rent one month. I've had to do everything while working overtime, and I've never had that safety net to fall back on (until in laws came along). At 19 I was exhausted all the time, working around the clock to make it, knowing that if one little thing went wrong, like if I got a sick and had to take a week off, I might not be able to pay my bills and I'd be on the streets.

I saw my family recently. My mother is now unable to care for herself, I don't know exactly what the reasoning is. She is starving herself and so underweight that she could probably die any second. I don't think she is doing it for the sake of vanity, I think that now that she doesn't have someone to make sick, she has to do it herself. She typically sees a doctor once a day five times a week, and again I don't know why.

From what I hear about AARC these days they have dressed the building up and worsened the situation for it's clients. I don't believe that there is any way to improve AARC. The amount of violence engraved in the staff members is too powerful to cure. I'd tell you that the only people who should end up in this place are the worst of criminals or rapists, but I remember a situation where a boy had raped one of the girls in AARC (before either of them were in AARC), and he did not have to "make amends" to her, meanwhile she was being taught she was the problem. In fact the boy was made a staff member after graduating. I feel that there are probably many kids out there who were abused enough in AARC to press criminal charges, but they are either too afraid or too confused about what happened to talk about it. Most of the victims I speak to are working so hard to change their lives and get away from anything involved with AARC that they simply say "I just can't deal with it right now."

I will always live with the knowledge that I lost one year of my youth during one of our most developmental years. When freed from AARC I heard about a local man I'd known who was arrested for sexually assaulting his 2 daughters (both under the age of 12). He spent only 3 months in prison where he was allowed all civil rights, time to himself, outside contact. Meanwhile everything had been taken from me and I wasn't even allowed to speak about the people I'd loved before AARC.

I can be contacted by the email address on my profile or through private message here.

Mylitta
[ This Message was edited by: Mel on 2005-04-28 19:50 ]

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