Life As A Cult Leader - My

The problems began, as they always do, with sex and money. Sarah, a new Echo with desperate eyes and a husband who didn't understand her, cornered me in the tool shed. “You said we have to shed attachments,” she whispered. “Attachments to things. To people. To… marriage.” I told her that she needed to meditate on it. Then I went inside and closed the blinds.

He stared at me for a long time. Then he nodded slowly and walked away. He didn’t leave. He worked harder. Because I had given him a new, even more addictive drug: the secret knowledge that the leader was a fraud, and the mission was to protect him anyway. My Life as a Cult Leader

By year three, we were two hundred strong. Marcus built an off-grid server. A former chef named Elena turned our vegetable scraps into gourmet meals. I woke up each morning to a line of people waiting just to glimpse me sipping my nettle tea. They saw profound detachment. I was just hungover. The problems began, as they always do, with sex and money

The money was trickier. We had built a sustainable commune, but I had convinced them we needed a “Global Resonance Center”—a compound in the desert where we could amplify our frequency. The price tag was four million dollars. I believed in it, sort of. It’s hard not to believe your own propaganda when people are weeping in gratitude for it. “Attachments to things

“There is no Resonance Center,” Marcus said. “There’s just a dusty plot of land you looked at on Zillow.”