Scientology
When Can I Start My Life?
By "Darla deToledo"
How do I tell this story? I feel that to explain one part of my life, I have
to explain the rest. But I will strive not to. I was raised in the Church of
Scientology, as they like to call themselves, and I was living in Clearwater,
Florida. I now know that the "church" is really a cult. But even back then I
didn't like it very much and I knew that I had to get out. I wasn't happy, I
wasn't getting schooling, and I didn't want to dedicate my life to working
for the church as my mother, grandmother, and brother had.
I had tried several times before to leave the church but my mother and the
officials put so much pressure on me and put my father in so much trouble
that I gave up each time. I wanted to live with my father and lead a normal
life. You see my father had left the church clergy when I was five years old
and had divorced my mother. He lived in LA with my sister and her baby,
Sophie. He was still a follower of the religion in everyone's eyes, although
he really didn't believe it and no longer paid for services. My sister had
been in a situation similar to mine, had joined the clergy, got married when
she was 15 years old, and had gotten pregnant so that she could leave the
clergy in a relatively quick time (a few months). If you work for the church
and become pregnant, they try to convince you to have an abortion and if you
don't you have to "route out". They're too cheap to take care of babies.
I had finally put my foot down in early 1999 about it. I was adamant that I
would leave and live a normal life in the "wog world", as the epithet was.
But my mother held a lot over my head. If I left the church with the
slightest bit of hard feelings or upset on anyone's part I would no longer
able to receive church services, damning my soul to eternal pain and
inability. In order to leave I had to study and practice a given amount of
church doctrines. I knew my mother's plan; she wanted to wear me down with
years if need be, of waiting and studying church rubbish until it was too
late for me to lead a normal life in society. I wouldn't have the proper
social skills and education for it.
It's hard to explain what my life was like back then, and I've fogged it over
in my memory now. But let's just say that I lived in a tiny room with two
other people, slept on a mat on the floor, and did clerical work all day. The
only things I did on my own were 1) I went to the library each morning, and
read until lunch, 2) I called LA almost every day. My mom disapproved of
both. Actually, she didn't even know how often I called my dad and sister. I
did it in secret at the library's public phone. The phone calls were probably
my one line on sanity. Without them I'm sure that I would have given up on
leaving.
Finally one night over the phone my sister asked (and I thought she was
joking), "Do you want Dad to just come pick you up secretly? No one would
have to know until you got to LA, and then you wouldn't have to speak to
anyone when you got here." I thought about the possibilities and it was just
too much. I would be entering an existence that I had never experienced. I
didn't know if I had what it took to survive in it. But then again, my own
life! "Yes," I said, before even realizing it. I felt such acute relief that
my whole body seemed lighter. My sister was really surprised. "Are you
serious?" she asked. But we started making plans that night and we would
continue to for several weeks. Standing on that phone, in a bad area by the
bay, the receiver stunk of alcohol and bad breath. But I was the happiest I'd
been in a long time.
The night before I was to leave, I kissed my grandma goodnight for the last
time. I felt horrible. Because in spite of everything else, I would be
leaving half of my family. They would never look at me the same way. They
would think me scum. In spite of all their characteristics that I didn't
like, my grandmother's loftiness, my mother's manipulativeness, my brother's
selfishness, they were victims of the church just like me.
Then, the next morning, I woke up late. I had to rush, throwing out all of
the stuff I wasn't bringing so that my poor mother wouldn't be bothered with
it. I caught a ride with this guy I knew. He had this 40 year old jeep with
no doors and I remember the feeling of spontaneity I had. After all, I took
the crowded church bus every day. Riding in a car was something special. Most
people weren't even allowed to drive their cars into work, but he worked on
renovations and needed his jeep for transportation.
I finished packing my things at the work building and went to say goodbye to
my mother. I had to make up some dumb excuse to talk to her or else I
wouldn't have been allowed in to her course room. Families don't count for
anything there. I said, "Okay then, see you later," even though there was a
chance that I never would. I was in fact hoping that I never would see her
again.
I was planning to make two trips to the library to carry all my stuff. My
hands wouldn't stay dry as I thought of passing all of those scientologist
ethics personnel and security guards. But at the same time, it was a great
adventure. As I waited at the first stop light I saw a scientologist
approaching me. I froze up, thinking that he might notice the several tightly
packed backpacks on my back. But he just made idle conversation while we
waited on the corner.
When I saw my Dad, I tried to bury my emotions. I knew that he didn't want to
have to handle me crying when we were in a rush to make the return flight. He
was parked in the library parking lot with a rented car. We were a little
behind in time, but besides that the plan was going well.
When I went back to get the cardboard box, it collapsed on me in the
stairwell. So I quickly stashed it in the side alley and went to go get my
dad. I couldn't leave it behind and enter LA life without anything of mine. I
just couldn't. I kept thinking that that would make me no better than a bum.
So we planned to drive up to the alley and grab it. I was really scared as
scientologists had planted cameras all around their buildings. I knew because
I'd seen their videos. In fact, I even had Dad duck when we drove under the
traffic lights by the Coachman building.
I ran, grabbed the box, and tried to look relaxed as I lugged it about a
hundred feet or so to the car.
As we were driving my sister called, asking if the "mission" was going well,
and we joked that we were doing 007 work or something. But on that rather
long drive to Tampa airport reality started to enter in again and the James
Bond adventure effect wore off. "If I turn back now no one will know," I kept
saying to myself. It was a weird mix of emotions. After all, I was leaving my
mother, an old woman who had never had good health.
We shoved my stuff into some suitcases my Dad had brought and got on the
plane. I didn't ask my Dad if I could stop the plane as we were going down
the runway, but I wanted to.
When we arrived at the LA airport I changed shirts, not wanting my mother to
be able to describe what I was wearing. It wouldn't be unusual for church
security guards, with someone I knew, like my brother for instance, to come
to "escort" me back to the church's embrace. We got in the car and my sister
dialed up the receptionist in Florida. She left a message saying that I had
arrived safely, a message I often left when I flew to LA for a visit with my
dad. I did this because I didn't want my mom to worry about me too much. I
had stayed late at the library several times before and I was hoping that she
would think I had unethically stayed there late again. That way she wouldn't
even know that I had flown to LA until I arrived. But I could tell that Janet
wasn't fooled. I could tell from the tone of her voice that she thought I had
possibly run away. Even in scientology organizations receptionists know all
the gossip, including the stuff circulating about me.
When I got home my Mother had left 3 very angry phone calls on the answering
machine. When she next called my sister picked up. My sister and dad were
insisting that I didn't have to talk to her, but I took the phone anyway. My
mother was at a conference table or something with security guards and ethics
personnel, all there to handle the situation I'd created. I was so scared
that I could hear my thunderous heartbeats. I didn't think I could bear it if
she played the whole grieving mother role, and when she snapped, "Well that
wasn't very smart," I felt relief crash through me. A little smile came to my
face. I had made the right choice.
Later, after I'd dragged it out of her, she finally admitted to me that she
had never even thought that I would possibly leave the church. She had never
even thought of the possibility. She had always thought to just force and
manipulate me into doing exactly what she thought best. I find it ironic that
although many parents do this exact same thing, my mother was as truly off
the edge as many kids think their parents are. Too bad she forgot how
stubborn I can be.
It was the hardest decision I ever made and the best choice I ever chose.
From: Stacy Brooks <stacybrooks@lisatrust.net>
Subject: "When Can I Start My Life?" by Darla de Toledo (Zoe Woodcraft)
Date: Tue, 27 Mar 2001 14:17:09 -0500
Organization: The Lisa McPherson Trust, 33 North Fort Harrison Avenue, Clearwater, Florida 33755 Telephone: (727) 467-9335 Fax: (727) 467-9345
Message-ID: <dpp1ctgh3siuahd4trbttolghd9kd9sd0q@4ax.com>