My Nine Lives in Scientology by M. Pignotti  9/10

http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Library/Shelf/pignotti/

Those of us in the RPF began to spend more and more time on the photo shoots
and less and less time on the RPF. Hubbard eventually formed an org called
the "LRH Photoshoot Org", which consisted of many RPF members. For some
reason, other than occasionally modelling for some of his pictures, I was
not on the staff of the photo shoot org. The RPF gradually dwindled down
until Ron Hopkins and I were the only ones left. Finally, the RPF disbanded
entirely, and I was assigned to do Folder Error Summaries ("FESes"), which
means going through people's auditing folders and noting down auditing
errors that were made and the progress of the case, or lack, thereof. I was
still not allowed to audit, but I was no longer on the RPF.

In the fall, Hubbard sold the ship and we all moved to a land base at the
Fort Harrison Hotel in Clearwater, Florida. The accomodations there were a
big improvement over the ship. I shared a hotel room with two of my best
friends, Lieke and Karen, both auditors. To anyone else, the room might have
seemed crowded, but to us, we had more space than we had in years, as we
were used to sleeping in a room with 50 other women on the ship. We even had
a television set in our room. I hadn't watched TV in years. I would go up to
my room during lunch breaks and after a day's work and watch TV. My favorite
shows were "Star Trek" and "Bewitched", both in reruns at the time. Many
people in the Sea Org loved Star Trek since we liked to think of ourselves
of being on a mission, like the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise.

In Florida, I continued FESing folders, which wasn't the most exciting job
in the world, but it was peaceful. Some of the people who's folders I FESed
were celebrities, such as Karen Black and Chick Corea. One day I went to see
the intern supervisor at the time, Brian Livingstone, about getting my
certificates back as an auditor. I assumed that he knew that LRH had ordered
my certificates cancelled, but he didn't remember. Just as he was going to
write me out a program, Judy Thiery came over to us and told him that LRH
had cancelled my certificates. Brian was furious with me and accused me of
trying to trick him. I said that I thought he had known what had happened
with me and was just trying to find out how I could Bet my certificates
back, but he refused to have anything further to do with me.

In May, the Commanding Officer of AOLA, Gary Epstein, decided that he wanted
me to return to Los Angeles and made a request to Flag. I was ordered to
return to Los Angeles and assigned the position of Director of Processing at
the Advanced Org in Los Angeles (AOLA), where I had originally come from.
Before I left, Jeff Walker finally gave me a program that I could follow to
regain my certificates as an auditor. As Director of Processing, I would be
responsible for the solo auditing of all the people who came to AOLA to do
the Clearing Course and OT levels. Even though it was a much better position
than I currently had, FESing folders, I was very sorry to leave Florida. I
had requested to remain in Florida, but my request was denied and I had no
choice but to go to LA.

In May, 1976 I assumed the post of Director of Processing at AOLA. I felt
very much alone and kept my distance from everyone. Some people seemed to be
in awe of me because of the fact I had spent so much time on Flag. No one
knew about the trouble I had been in. I never got close to anyone at AOLA,
the whole time I was there.

Like most Sea Org living quarters, the condition of the house I lived in was
shabby, but I had my own small room. The house was in LA and we commuted by
van to Hollywood every day, where the org was located. As Director of
Processing, I was receiving bonuses in addition to my regular Sea Org pay,
so I decided to take an apartment outside the staff house at my own expense.
I shared a very nice two-bedroom apartment across the street from where I
worked, with two men who worked for the Guardian's Office, but were not Sea
Org members. I shared a room with one of the men, Gene, but our relationship
was strictly platonic. We slept in separate beds.

Living outside of Sea Org housing was unusual for a Sea Org member, but I
managed to get away with it, probably because I had come from Flag and no
one dared to challenge me. Living in that apartment gave me more privacy
than I'd had in years. I was becoming increasingly aware that I was not
happy at all in the Sea Org. Gene was the only person I was at all close to
and he wasn't in the Sea Org, even though he was in Scientology. I missed my
friends on Flag (Florida) very much, especially Quentin. Quentin and I wrote
to each other regularly.

During the time I was in LA, I increasingly spent more and more time alone.
I would go to my apartment every chance I got, just to get a way from the
org. Sometimes, during my half hour lunch break, I would go there and just
think about my situation. I would sit there, dreading having to go back to
work and began to feel like I was really in a trap.

There were things about my new job that I hated, such as having to make
phone calls to people who had not paid for their next OT level. I was
expected to use high pressure tactics to get them to return. I remember
telling one person that if he did not come in for his next OT level, that he
would die. I really disliked making these phone calls, but it was an
expected part of my job. I really didn't want to be an administrator, even
though the position was considered senior to that of an auditor. I would
have preferred just to be an auditor and work with people one-on-one, but in
the Sea Org what I wanted was never considered.

I began to think about leaving and week by week, put a little bit of money
aside from the bonuses I was receiving. At this point, I wasn't ready to
take action on my thoughts, but put the money away "just in case".

One day in early July, 1976, I received a frantic phone call from my mother.
My father had been on vacation in Philadelphia and had a heart attack. She
said that it was very bad and the doctors didn't know if he'd make it
through the night. Years later, she told me that she had tried to call the
org three times before she finally got through to me. Nobody gave me her
messages the first two times. I immediately flew to Philadelphia, spending
the entire five hours in the air, not knowing if my father would be alive or
dead when I arrived. To my Scientology identity, death didn't mean anything.
One simply dropped one's body and could pick up a new one and start a new
life. However, there was still a part of me that was aware of the personal
tragedy that my father's death would be and the pain I would feel if I were
to arrive at the hospital and found out he had died. When I finally did
arrive in Philadelphia, early the next morning, I was very relieved to learn
that my father had pulled through and was going to be all right. He did,
however, have a very serious heart condition that would have to be
constantly monitored. He was given a pacemaker while he was in the hospital
that he would be dependent on.

While I was in Philadelphia, I spent a great deal of time with my mother. I
was in the "wog" world with no other Scientologists anywhere around me. We
stayed at a hotel near the hospital and, when we weren't visiting my father,
we had a lot of time to talk. I can remember one conversation we had about
life in the Soviet Union. My mother was telling me how people in the Soviet
Union had no choice about their careers. From a very young age, the
government decided what that person would do based, not on personal desire,
but on what was best for the Soviet Union. I thought about that for awhile
and realized that my life in Scientology was much the same as that of a
Soviet. I had wanted to live in Florida and be an auditor and here I was in
LA, doing a job I didn't want to do and I had no choice in the matter. I
confessed to my mother how I felt and she asked me if I would consider
coming home with her and not returning to the Sea Org. She said that the
door would always be open to me. I wasn't ready to make such a move at that
time, but it helped me tremendously to know I had an option. After being in
the "wog" world for three weeks, it didn't seem like such a terrible place.

When my father recovered enough to travel, we took him back to my parents'
home in Michigan, where I stayed for about a week. I still felt I had to
return to Scientology to try to work things out, so on August 1, 1976, I
returned to LA. After having been away for three weeks, things in LA looked
even worse. My senior, Tina and I, had never gotten along well. Soon after
my return, we had a big fight and I walked off my post as Director of
Processing, refusing to work with her. I cannot recall what the fight was
about, but I think it had something to do with her not giving me my mother's
messages for several hours. The Commanding Officer, Gary Epstein and the
Ethics Officer tried to get me to go back on post, but I refused, saying
that I would be willing to work at another job, but not with Tina. I
volunteered to FES folders and they agreed, at least, temporarily. I don't
think anyone in LA quite knew what to do with me. If I had done such a thing
on Flag, I would have been immediately sent to the RPF, but in LA, people
were in awe of me because I had been on Flag and besides, at the time, there
was no RPF in LA.

I felt like I was in limbo. I would come in every day and FES folders all
day long. I wasn't being punished, so I was still allowed the same time off
I always was. One day, I had the afternoon off and I was going for a walk by
myself on Hollywood Boulevard. Suddenly, a significant mental shift occurred
and I thought to myself, "What am I doing here? This is not what I had
expected when I first joined the Sea Org. I really am unhappy here and I
can't go on like this. I've got to do something about my situation."

Right then and there, I made the following decision: I would give the
situation two weeks. If, in two weeks, things hadn't changed for the better,
I would do one of two things: I would either go and talk to someone in the
org, come clean and confess everything I had been thinking and feeling and
get straight with the group, or I would leave the group, without telling
anyone what I was going to do. The fact that I had allowed myself to have
these thoughts was quite significant; it showed that because I had been away
and spent so much time alone, I was beginning to free myself from the mind
control I had been under for so many years. A person under mind control
would never allow himself to have such critical thoughts about the group,
without censoring them. I had been taught that critical thoughts meant
undisclosed crimes, but somehow I realized that my thoughts were valid and I
was innocent.

I returned to work the next day, keeping the decision I had made secret from
everyone. This was something that I was going to have to work out on my own.
The two weeks passed and nothing happened for awhile. I continued to come in
every day and FES folders. I said very little to anyone and no one seemed to
bother me until Friday, August 20, 1976. That afternoon, Gary Epstein had a
talk with me. He was very angry with me for leaving my post and said I
should cut out the nonsense and return to my post. He sarcastically accused
me of thinking I was above everyone because I had been on Flag with Quentin.
He sent me to talk to the Ethics Officer, who was nicer. He tried to
persuade me to return to my post, but I still refused. He said that if I
didn't return, he would have no choice but to comm ev me. I knew that I
would have to act soon.

The next morning, Saturday, August 21, I was FESing folders as usual. Some
of the people I worked with were gossiping about a young woman named Pandora
Cooper who had been an auditor and case supervisor for the org in
Washington, D.C. It was rumored that she had wanted to leave and not been
allowed to. She was locked up in a room against her will and forced to
receive auditing. She pretended to go along with the auditing and told her
captors that the auditing had really helped her and that she had changed her
mind about leaving. Once she convinced them that she wanted to stay, they
let her out of the room, at which time she left the org and never returned.
I realized that what happened to Pandora could easily happen to me and I had
to act fast.

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