| 
                     
                      | Astra 
                          Woodcraft Interview  
                          Part Three "Leaving 
                          the Sea Org" Video 
                          Interview - January 20, 2001 |  |  |  
 Transcript 
                    of Part Three Astra: 
                    The Sea Org doesn't want them to leave until they've gotten 
                    them to confess to all their crimes, searched all their belongings 
                    to make sure they're not taking anything and sign an affidavit 
                    saying they'll never sue the Church. They'll never speak badly 
                    out against the Church and that everything they did was wrong 
                    and everything the Church did was wonderful. And, by that 
                    time, they have hoped to convinced them to stay anyway. But 
                    if they had to leave, they want all of that done first. So, 
                    there was a couple who twice left and then came back. They 
                    left without permission and they came back. So they were considered 
                    a very high security risk. My job was
 Stacy: 
                    Now who were they? Do you remember? Astra: 
                    Shawn Breneckie (sp?) and his wife. I forget her name. So 
                    they had left twice, just they had gone to, like, to his parents 
                    house, like, 30 minutes away. But now they were considered 
                    a high security risk even though they came right back. It 
                    was my responsibility to make sure they didn't do it again 
                    or that anybody else didn't do it. I had to have them under 
                    24 hour security watch.  Stacy: 
                    What does that mean? Astra: 
                    That means 24 hours a day, someone is with them making sure 
                    they don't go anywhere.  Stacy: 
                    And who did you use to watch them? Astra: 
                    No one was allowed to do it because it's very strict in Scientology 
                    that if it's not your job, you don't do it in the Sea Org. 
                    There's, like, policies on only do your own job. That was 
                    nobody's job. There was no job to do that.  Stacy: 
                    Right
so? Astra: 
                    But it fell under me. So I would have to convince people to 
                    do it. Convince people to let their, you know, their junior 
                    do it, etcetera. But, at one point, I couldn't find anybody 
                    to do it. So, I had to put a mattress outside their door and 
                    tie my arm to their door so that if they left, it would wake 
                    me up. It would, like, pull my arm and wake me up.  Stacy: 
                    So, you're sleeping like this? Astra: 
                    Mm-hmm. (interviewer laughs) For
I don't know, a while, 
                    a week or two. And so that was pretty ridiculous.  Stacy: 
                    So, you didn't want this to happen to you.  Astra 
                    No. Stacy: 
                    I can understand that.  Astra: 
                    Yeah, exactly. (laughs) I mean, I was doing it to people and 
                    I regret, like, everything I ever did, you know?  Stacy: 
                    Did you feel bad about it at the time?  Astra: 
                    I did. I felt really bad. I just wanted
I so badly wanted 
                    to be, like, the person who opens the cage and lets the birds 
                    fly away, you know what I mean? I wanted to let them go so 
                    badly and I wanted to go with them. (laughs) And the people 
                    who did finally get permission to go, I was, like, thinking, 
                    "Take me!" I was so
I was jealous of them! 
                    Not jealous but
 Stacy: 
                    Envious. Astra: 
                    Envious. Yeah, that's the right word. I was so envious. I'm, 
                    like, "Oh my God, they're free!" You know, and they're 
                    so brave to have persevered through all of that, you know? 
                    And I never thought I could do it. And, anyway, then there 
                    was a reorganization and I became the Ethics Officer and then 
                    the Director of Inspections and Reports for the entire building, 
                    which was, like, 600 staff. Stacy: And what was the name of that place?
 Astra: 
                    They
that was
I was the Ethics Officer then. I was
they 
                    had the Department of Inspections and Reports. I was the Director 
                    of Inspections and Reports for
this now, it was called 
                    the Flag Liaison Office. International Training Org became 
                    part of it. But this is more like, 400, 600 staff.  Stacy: 
                    That's the FOLO.  Astra: 
                    As
no, that's
the FOLO is the same but lower. There's, 
                    like, a FOLO in every continent. Like a FOLO in Europe
 Stacy: 
                    Yeah? Astra: 
                    This was the FLO which is, like, the senior organization to 
                    all of the FOLO's. They were, like, lower management. We were
 Stacy: 
                    So this was a pretty heavy post. Astra: 
                    We were middle management. Well, I was also the Security Chief. 
                    That fell under me. The Security Chief
 Stacy: 
                    For the Flag Liaison? Astra: 
                    For the Flag Liaison Office. And this is the Hollywood Guaranty 
                    Building on Hollywood Boulevard.  Stacy: 
                    HGB? Astra: 
                    Yeah. And they have the Life Exhibition there. And then they 
                    have the whole middle management is there. And then OSA is 
                    there. But because OSA is very sensitive, Office of Special 
                    Affairs, you know. They deal with all the legal things to 
                    the Church. I wasn't the Director of Inspections for that 
                    because you have to have special clearance and that's all, 
                    like, super confidential. But I was the Security Chief for 
                    them. We did security for the whole building.  Stacy: 
                    But the HGB is the international level of management.  Astra: 
                    They're, like, the (unintelligible). They're considered upper 
                    middle management.  Stacy: 
                    So, it's WISE Int., and SMI Int. Astra: 
                    Yeah, it is international to that degree. The only thing above 
                    it is RTC. Stacy: 
                    Right. Astra: 
                    But they are, they Church of Scientology International. Like, 
                    legally, their legal term is Church of
 Stacy: 
                    The people who at the building where you worked? Astra: 
                    Yeah. That's Church of Scientology International.  Stacy: 
                    Right. Astra: 
                    So
 Stacy: 
                    So that's a big job.  Astra: 
                    Yeah. And I was
it was me and a girl younger than me 
                    who was about 14 for the whole building and, like, 3 or 4 
                    security guards. It was also my job to collect all the statistics 
                    every week and there were a good 10 or 15 people at a time 
                    who wanted to leave. And I was responsible for watching them, 
                    handling them to stay. There's policies, I guess, for public 
                    relations reasons that say if you want to leave, you have 
                    to be shipped out within 24 hours. But no one ever leaves 
                    in under, like
 Zoe: 
                    Oh, I've never heard of anyone leaving within 24 hours! Astra: 
                    In my
no, no one ever does. Zoe: 
                    Never! Not even, like, I've never even heard of a month but 
                    maybe. But I've never heard of that. Astra: 
                    Six months to a year and you're lucky. You know, two years 
                    sometimes. Because one of the main reasons is they're trying 
                    to break you down and another reason is you have to go to 
                    confessional before you go. And there's no one to give the 
                    confessionals. No one had that job.  Stacy: 
                    So how did you deal with it?  Astra: 
                    They would have to convince an auditor to do it. Convince 
                    someone to take some time to do it. The organization is so 
                    bureaucratic. It's so ridiculous 'cause it's all these jobs 
                    and there's all these policies and you have to do this, you 
                    have to do this, you have to do this. But you can't do this! 
                    But you have to do this but you can't do this! And there's 
                    an expression, "Make it go right." You can't say, 
                    "I can't do this 'cause there's no one there to do it." 
                    It's, like, "Make it go right. You have to it anyway." 
                    You could get an order or, like, a program written and it 
                    says, you know, I don't know
 "Set up computers 
                    in this office and set up whole computer systems." But 
                    there will be no money to do it. (interviewer laughs) But 
                    that's no excuse. So, you try and get permission for money 
                    and you're told, "No money. There's no money to do it." 
                    But you still have to do it. So, you have people yelling at 
                    you saying, "Do it!" And then you're trying to get 
                    the money and they say there's no money. And everyone is just, 
                    like, going round and round in circles. It's the most unbelievable 
                    thing you've ever seen! Zoe: 
                    Yeah! Stacy: 
                    You're ordered to do it. There's no money so you say
So 
                    they come in and they say
 Astra: 
                    "Make it go right." Stacy: 
                    "You have to do this," and you say, "Well, 
                    I didn't get the money approved." And they
 Astra: 
                    "You're counter-intention!"  Zoe: 
                    Yeah. They say, "you're reasonable," which, to us, 
                    now sounds like a good thing to be. (everyone laughs) They 
                    even preach that you should be unreasonable but
 Astra: 
                    Because they have a policy, suppressive reasonableness. So 
                    if you take an excuse for something, like, there is no money, 
                    you are being suppressively reasonable.  Zoe: 
                    And you're being logical, exactly. (interviewer laughs) Astra: 
                    Or they would have to send
they'd get an order, you know, 
                    you get an order, "Send these people out to this other 
                    organization to handle them because they're not doing well." 
                    But it was no one's job to go. So they would have to, like, 
                    find people to go. But there is also a policy that says "Don't 
                    do anything other than job. Don't let your juniors do anything 
                    other than their job." So, you would say, "There's 
                    no one to go and these people can't go because it's off policy." 
                    Then there is another policy that says "You cannot use 
                    policy to stop." (interviewer laughs) So, you're using 
                    policy to stop.  Zoe: 
                    Yeah! Astra: 
                    You're being suppressively reasonable (interviewer laughs) 
                    and you're being counter-intention! And people spend months 
                    trying to, like, find someone to do something. And there's 
                    no new
hardly any new people coming in and there's people 
                    leaving. So, you know
 Stacy: 
                    How did you stay
how did you survive this? Astra: 
                    The International Training Org, when I first got there, had, 
                    like 100 staff. And a year later, a year and a half later, 
                    had, like 40.  Zoe: 
                    It was always constant struggle and arguments between the 
                    staff because someone could say, "Oh look. I'm right. 
                    Look at this policy." And the other person goes, "Well, 
                    yeah. Well, I'm right. Look at this policy." And they 
                    conflict. The policies conflict each other. (laughs) And a 
                    third person could say, if they are higher in post, most people 
                    would, like, listen to them and say, "Oh, no. Look I 
                    have this policy here. This
" but you know you could 
                    always find a policy to conflict that one, I mean
it 
                    doesn't make sense. Lawrence: 
                    I always remember there's another policy in which there's 
                    a thing called an "Admin Scale" and there's, like, 
                    a list of the importance of things. And one of the most important 
                    things is purpose. And then policy comes below purpose.  Zoe: 
                    Yeah. You're, like, "How do you make it fit?"  Lawrence: 
                    Then if you had something to do and you said, "But that's 
                    counter to this policy." They would say, "You're 
                    using policy to stop because purpose is higher than policy." 
                     Zoe: 
                    Oh yeah.  Lawrence: 
                    And then if you follow the purpose without the policy, you're 
                    off policy. So, you're just spinning like a top.  Zoe: 
                    And there's always another policy to contradict what you say. Astra: 
                    It sound amusing now and it makes me laugh
 Lawrence: 
                    It was hell. Astra: 
                    But, in reality, when you are there. This is how it goes: 
                    "Do that right now." "Sir, I can't because 
                    we didn't get any money." (yelling) "You're fucking 
                    counter-intention! Do it right now! You're in lower conditions! 
                    You're going to the Rehabilitation Project Force!" You 
                    know, (yelling) "You're going to eat in the stairwell! 
                    You're on beans and rice! You fucking get it done!" Like 
                    that's what it is.  Stacy: 
                    And there's so much profanity
 Astra: 
                    Yeah.  Zoe: 
                    Oh, yeah! Stacy: 
                    
that it's unbelievable! Astra: 
                    One day, they had a newspaper or someone come to do a story 
                    and it was supposed to be good story on Scientology. So all 
                    the staff were brought into a room and told, "No swearing 
                    today. No swearing. I know swearing is how we get things done," 
                    Ron Norton said this. "I know swearing is used a lot 
                    and it's how we do things, ha ha," and he chucked, "and 
                    we have to use it to get things done. That's how we get things 
                    done around here but just for public relations reasons today, 
                    don't swear." So, I mean, you have, like these people
and 
                    there are some people
and there is an organization called 
                    the Commodores Messenger Organization. They have the authority-if 
                    they don't like what you say to them or didn't get something 
                    done for them-they have the authority to imMediately assign 
                    you to what's called the Rehabilitation Project Force. Which, 
                    for a year or two or longer, you will wear all black. You 
                    will run everywhere you go. You will not speak to anybody. 
                    You will eat crappy food. You will get paid $6.00 a week or, 
                    like, a quarter of what everyone else gets paid. You'll have 
                    to repent. You'll have to, you know, say you did everything 
                    wrong. You'll have to do endless confessionals. And people 
                    are
my brother was on this for, I think a year and a 
                    half before they said, "Oh, we made a mistake in sending 
                    you to it." But other people are on it for three years. 
                    Some people have been on it for six years before they were 
                    allowed off. They are allowed to send you imMediately. So, 
                    they come and say, (yelling) "Get this done right now
" 
                    and they're not even your senior. They are just someone else 
                    entirely trying to get something else done but they have, 
                    like, ultimate authority. They're supposed to be L. Ron Hubbard's 
                    word on everything. So, they come into an office, (yelling) 
                    "Astra! What are you doing?" "Oh, sir, you 
                    know, I'm doing this
" (yelling) "Well, where's 
                    this product?" "I didn't get to it." (yelling) 
                    "Well, fucking get it done! You're counter-intention! 
                    Fuck you! Go to ethics! Write up your O/W's! You are not going 
                    home until this is done!" You know, that was what it 
                    was like. That was my life for, like, four and a half years. 
                    You could be doing a good job on what you're doing. But if 
                    you didn't do something for them, they could just scream at 
                    you and no one could do anything. And you couldn't report 
                    them.  Stacy: 
                    How did you survive? Astra: 
                    I don't know. I just went more and more
that's why I 
                    said, I got to a point where I was suicidal because I was 
                    terrified. Just more and more and more and more. I just went 
                    more and more crazy. But, in a way, you get used to it. But, 
                    in a way, you never get used to it. Because you
I mean, 
                    I guess I got used to it, you know, I thought it was, you 
                    know, just the way it was. And I just kept hoping
we 
                    were always in a condition of
like, we were always being 
                    told we weren't getting our job done. The whole building
the 
                    whole organization-we weren't getting our job done. We weren't 
                    expanding Scientology. Scientology wasn't expanding. We had 
                    to handle it. But we always kind of had the idea that it was 
                    going to soon change. We were going to change it and then 
                    everything would be okay and we wouldn't be yelled at all 
                    the time. Stacy: 
                    Where is this coming from? Is this coming from RTC? (Religious 
                    Technology Center)  Astra: 
                    Mm-hmm.  Stacy: 
                    From the CMO? Astra: 
                    Yeah. Yeah. We would have briefings. We had two reorganizations 
                    when I was there. Where they reorganized everything and they 
                    said, you know, "it's not expanding under you guys. We're 
                    going to do this." Everyone got assigned a lower condition, 
                    like, you are all in treason.  Stacy: 
                    The whole building? Astra: 
                    Yeah. And we were in like for, like, a year. And no one was 
                    allowed to take a day off. You know, no one was allowed anything 
                    for, like, a year.  Stacy: 
                    Let me ask you something, Astra. This is all going on at the 
                    management level but the public Scientologists are not aware 
                    of this at all, are they? Astra: 
                    No.  Stacy: 
                    How do they manage to keep the public Scientologists from 
                    finding out what it's really like?  Astra: 
                    We were made to, like, drill
I'll explain what we did. 
                    We would all
everyone would go into a room and we would 
                    be briefed. "You are not allowed to tell anybody what 
                    is going on here. If you have a problem, you are not allowed 
                    to say it. You know, if you have anything going on, you are 
                    not allowed to tell them. If you disagree with anything, you 
                    can't say anything. All you can do is write a report on it. 
                    Even if your spouse or brother or sister or friend is in a 
                    lower level organization, you can't tell them anything. Under 
                    no circumstances can you tell your family anything." 
                    Then they would have us pair up and one of us say, "you 
                    pretend to be my father." And you'd say, "Astra, 
                    how's school going?" And I would have to give my answer 
                    and accept my answer. "Oh, I'm going to school. It's 
                    wonderful." "Astra, aren't you working kind of long 
                    hours?" "No. I'm not, you know, we get off at this 
                    time and it's all legal. And it's all good and I love work 
                    anyway. But we probably shouldn't talk about it," or 
                    change the subject, you know?  Stacy: 
                    So you're drilling how to lie to people? Astra: 
                    We are, yeah. We are getting
 Zoe: 
                    Yeah. Astra: 
                    
regularly drilled on how to lie and if you didn't lie. 
                    If you did
if I told my dad, "I'm not going to school 
                    and I'm working these really long hours. I think it's illegal. 
                    I'm not happy." Anything like that or just anything that's 
                    going on is considered high level security and you're not 
                    allowed to tell anybody, you know? So, if I had said anything, 
                    I would have been assigned a condition of treason, which is 
                    when you get assigned for out-security. I would have had to 
                    do amends. And if I kept doing it, I would have ended up on 
                    the Rehabilitation Project Force.  Stacy: 
                    (To Zoe) Do you have something you wanted to add to this? Zoe: 
                    Yeah. Well, at least with me, but I noticed this with other 
                    people
you get into such a state of mind, like, "Oh, 
                    we're clearing the planet and all this." And it, like, 
                    your own well being is so unimportant that the Sea Org's image 
                    is your image and I remember, like, people asking me about-public 
                    Scientologists and I kind of, like, totally protect it. I 
                    was like a protective mother. Like, even if I lived in the 
                    worst place. Like, someone asked me, you know, that was getting 
                    recruited asked me about it, I'd be, like, "You know, 
                    they're nice rooms. Oh, yeah. Oh, it's good food. And you 
                    know, I'm friends with everyone. My life is going so well. 
                    And you know, I have such a better education right now than 
                    the public schools. Have you heard what's happening in public 
                    schools? I mean, we're just the top people on the planet." 
                     Stacy: 
                    And this isn't true
 Zoe: 
                    No! I didn't know I was lying because I felt like everyone 
                    has to think that the Sea Org was so good. And everyone had 
                    to respect Scientology because it was just, like, it was the 
                    most important thing on the planet and I don't know
 Astra: 
                    She had been indoctrinated in that since she was born! Zoe: 
                    Yeah! I mean, since I was born. So, for me, it was, like, 
                    oh I was protecting that! Everyone had to understand how important 
                    and how they should have respect.  Lawrence: 
                    I would like to say that, as Astra's father, I was on the 
                    receiving end of this and so
but I didn't actually know 
                    that Astra was totally prohibited from seeing me. So that 
                    I knew that she had mentioned that she would collect the statistics 
                    so, literally, every Thursday night, she would have to stay 
                    up all night. But then she was allowed to sleep in, like, 
                    Friday morning, right?  Astra: 
                    Right. Lawrence: 
                    So then she would sneak round 'cause I bought her a car so, 
                    partly so that I could get to see her. She would sneak round 
                    every Friday morning and visit with me because we were close 
                    as a father and daughter. And then I
when she went into 
                    the Sea Org, I had extracted promises. I said, "Well, 
                    I
you must finish your education." You know, "and 
                    I've heard these horror stories about people working all night 
                    and I used to. And I want you to get proper sleep. I want 
                    you to get proper nutrition." I was promised all these 
                    things by her and her senior. So, every Friday morning, I 
                    would say, "Astra," you know, "how's school? 
                    and she would say, "Fine." And I would say, you 
                    know, "What did you study?" "Oh, math." 
                    You know, "How's your sleep?" "Fine." 
                    So I knew that I was being BS'ed basically. I could just sense 
                    it. But I didn't dare say, "Come on. Why don't you tell 
                    me the truth? What's going on?" Because, you know, Astra 
                    seemed so into it and I was just afraid that I would be cut 
                    off as a parent. That I wouldn't see her again.  Stacy: 
                    There's some barrier there. Isn't there? Lawrence: 
                    There's a barrier, yeah.  Stacy: 
                    There's some barrier that everyone is afraid to cross. Astra: 
                    And it's true. And I was terrified of being told I could never 
                    see him anymore so I didn't want him to say anything to me 
                    that I would know that they would consider bad.  Zoe: 
                    And eventually you're freaking too. Astra: 
                    'Cause then I would have to admit it. And then I would be 
                    told I could never see him again. So, I wanted him to think 
                    I was doing okay.  Stacy: 
                    So everybody is play acting with everybody. Lawrence: 
                    Yeah.  Stacy: 
                    Everybody is afraid to say what they are honestly feeling. 
                     Astra: 
                    And what that does to your mind is just unbelievable! Lawrence: 
                    I know! Astra: 
                    You no longer know what is going on in your mind. You no longer 
                    know how you feel. You no longer know what's true, what's 
                    black, what's white. You don't know anything. I had no
my 
                    mind was just a mess. Lawrence: 
                    And then she would
because I was what they call disaffected 
                    at this point. I had, you know, I had paid lip service to 
                    Scientology but I personally no longer liked it. No longer 
                    had any intention of spending more money on it. And so then 
                    I would ask Astra a few questions about school and her health 
                    and then she would imMediately switch to, "Dad, you need 
                    to get back on course. Dad, you need to buy more auditing. 
                    Dad
" Astra: 
                    Well, this was my drilling of what to do. Lawrence: 
                    And I would then say
Astra: It's what I was
it was how I had to handle you.
 Lawrence: 
                    Then I would play my part. I would then say, "Oh, Astra, 
                    yes. I've just
you know, work's really hard. And I just, 
                    you know, I fully intend to do more auditing." Because, 
                    you know, I hated lying and I hated being a part of it but 
                    I was just terrified that
 Both of my daughters were 
                    in the Sea Org and I had heard so many horror stories of parents 
                    who just never saw their
you know, their children disappeared. Stacy: 
                    Those stories are true.  Lawrence: 
                    Yeah. Those stories are true.  Astra: 
                    I used to sneak off to see him. I wasn't allowed to see him 
                    and I wasn't rally allowed to have the car. But I lied and 
                    said I paid for the insurance myself and it was all mine. 
                    So, if they had known he paid for the insurance and stuff
that's 
                    an external influence. So, I was questioned about that by 
                    RTC.  Lawrence: 
                    How do you think these people have managed to gain such an 
                    incredible degree of control over people like you? And you? 
                    (to Zoe) Zoe: 
                    Oh, it's very gradual.  Astra: 
                    It's gradual and then it's very to do with the people who 
                    have family in it because that's right over your head. You 
                    know, like, I couldn't just walk away because my family was 
                    in it and they would never talk to me again. And after time, 
                    I mean, it's
okay, it's the thing where you think everything's 
                    your fault and you're a bad person and you don't want to be 
                    a bad person. You don't want everyone to look at you badly. 
                    You don't want your family to never speak to you again. And 
                    you really do think that this organization, even though, you 
                    know, you think they're saving mankind and you just think 
                    we're going through, like, a rough time right now. But it's 
                    our fault and we need to handle it. And I always had this 
                    thought, like, soon it will get better. Soon, we will save 
                    mankind and we won't get in trouble all the time, you know? 
                    Soon, things will smooth over. Soon, we'll be getting Scientology 
                    expanded all over the planet and, you know, and then no longer 
                    will everyone be yelling at us all the time.  Stacy: 
                    Why do you suppose the three of you were able to see the truth 
                    of the situation and your mother, obviously hasn't? Astra: 
                    We've talked about it, like, between the three of us to kind 
                    of try and figure it out. Because, for me personally, the 
                    whole time I was there, a little voice in the back of my mind 
                    was saying to me, "Why is this all true what Scientology 
                    says just because they say so? If I had been born into," 
                    you know, "the Christian religion, any other religion, 
                    another cult," you know, "what they would be saying 
                    would be true. So why is this true? Just because I was born 
                    into it?" I think with my mom, her mom's in Scientology. 
                    Her mom's in the Sea Organization. And I think my mom always 
                    was trying to please her mom because her older sister was 
                    very successful and she wasn't like her older sister. So she 
                    was always trying to please her mom. I think that's how she 
                    got
I don't know. You know, this is just my assumption. 
                     Zoe: 
                    You know, we can't be sure.  Astra: 
                    And then when she came into the Sea Organization, she kept 
                    moving up and up and up onto higher posts and that made her 
                    very important. And she got a lot of importance out of that. 
                    And, I mean, she was known and is known in the Sea Organization 
                    for being even more fanatical than most.  Stacy: 
                    Mm-hmm. Astra: 
                    She'll scream and yell at people. She'll really, really get 
                    into things. Even more than a lot of the other Sea Org Members. 
                     Lawrence: 
                    In the early days of the Sea Organization, she had been on 
                    the
L. Ron Hubbard had gone around the Mediterranean 
                    on a ship called the Apollo and so she had been on that ship 
                    with Hubbard. And she had met him and so, she was really caught 
                    up in it.  Stacy: 
                    So, she had been in the Sea Org and then she was out of the 
                    Sea Org and then she went back in?  Lawrence: 
                    Well, actually I think she had sent
that she had been 
                    a student and she had been sent there for training, not specifically 
                    in the Sea Org. But she had met Hubbard so that had a huge 
                    impact on her. And her attitude was, you know, this man Hubbard 
                    is so great, so wonderful. And if only you had met him, you 
                    know, you would want to do everything you could to help Scientology. 
                    And so I would
but I had a kind of a curiosity in my 
                    mind. I would ask her, you know, "Tell me about the upper 
                    levels of Scientology," you know, "and why is it 
                    you people hate psychiatrists?" You know, "I've 
                    met some psychiatrists. I think they're nice people. I think 
                    they want to help people." And she would, like, "How 
                    dare you say that? How dare you question
" Stacy: 
                    Was this before you were a Scientologist? Lawrence: 
                    No. I think, well, I had done some courses. And so, you know, 
                    but nothing
 Stacy: 
                    But you weren't yet
 Lawrence: 
                    I wasn't yet really into it, right. Stacy 
                    Really understanding what you were getting into?Lawrence: Right. But we were married and so, you know, I thought 
                    there would be, like, an open exchange of ideas. But really, 
                    she would shut off, you know?
 Stacy: 
                    So she was already a dedicated Scientologist before
 Lawrence: 
                    Exactly, yeah. Stacy: 
                    
before you even met her? Lawrence: 
                    Yeah. Right. Stacy: 
                    And then, did you meet because you came in and started taking 
                    these courses? Lawrence: 
                    Yes. Yeah, exactly. Stacy: 
                    Oh. Lawrence: 
                    And then we started to date and, you know, I always admired 
                    her because she had done, you know, the higher levels. And 
                    she was so highly trained. Stacy: 
                    And what do you think attracted her to you? Lawrence: 
                    Well, at the time I was one of the few people in the
I 
                    mean, I was
I had graduated in architecture. I had a 
                    job. I had a car. I had a place to live. And, honestly
 Stacy: 
                    These things are appealing. Lawrence: 
                    No one else really in the London organization, you know, had 
                    those things. Had prospects. Had a job, you know? They are 
                    all living hand to mouth. And I think she just saw that I 
                    was some kind of meal ticket, you know? She wasn't actually 
                    working. You know, she didn't have a proper job.  Astra: 
                    My mom was living
she was having some strange people 
                    watch Matthew because she couldn't afford to pay for a proper 
                    daycare. She was having to borrow money from her parents because 
                    she wasn't making any money working at the London Org because 
                    they didn't make a lot of money. You know, she was totally 
                    stretched thin. And then, along comes my dad. Zoe: 
                    I mean, it was my mother I've always thought that she kind 
                    of felt a responsibility towards having us raised in the Sea 
                    Org. Because, like, when you
okay, you're not even
even 
                    if you're on the same level in Scientology, like, spiritual 
                    training, you're not allowed to talk about it with anyone. 
                    And she was already way ahead of my father in spiritual training. 
                    And it's kind of like a barrier there because there's things 
                    you can't talk about and it kind of puts a strain on the relationship 
                    just because you can't talk about them. Or there's things 
                    one person knows and the other one doesn't. So, she kind of 
                    was, like, I guess her attitude was, like, "Oh, I know 
                    this and this and they just don't know it."  Stacy: 
                    Well, you feel a bit superior, don't you? Zoe: 
                    Yeah. Yeah. Totally. So, that's what I think.    Part 
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