Since Part XVI came out just before Christmas 2025, I decided to skip ahead to Part XXIII - The Holidays back in December. No need to rehash it, so we're going right to Part XXIV
When we got to Kearney we were, quite frankly, worn out, and were looking forward to August, when we would be done with this commitment, and with each other. One bright spot was that Kearney, being a college town, lacked the small town antipathy to outsiders that we encountered in Sidney. We got jobs where no one knew who we were, or that we were in a cult, and no one cared what we were doing.
One of the things that WOWs supposed to be doing to "move The Word" was running Power for Abundant Living (PFAL) classes. During our time in Sidney we had convinced just two people to take this class, Randy, a young man with a mysterious background and Tom, a forty-ish man who we found out later hung around because he was having sex with Rosemarie! Both of these men followed us to Kearney. There were also several Kearney people who had been signed up for PFAL by two Way women who had been assigned to Kearney before us, but were to be reassigned to Lincoln. At first we were pretty excited about running a class. Getting a class together was viewed in Way-world as prima facie evidence that you were "believing". WOWs, or even Way people in general, were viewed as spiritual slackers if they couldn't convince seven people to plunk down $100 to take PFAL. (My memory is a bit fuzzy, but a one point the "donation" was reduced to $40 — it may have been during that year)
The pressure was really on WOWs, since that was our primary job: witness for 8 hours a day, 6 days a week. If you couldn't run a class, surely the problem wasn't God, surely the problem wasn't God's Word, surely the problem wasn't The Class — this left just one suspect as the source of the lack of outreach success: you! This was a central tenet in The Way's circular reasoning, lack of results was never due to the plan, or the leadership being wrong, the problem was that you weren't believing. In a world where people ask questions, one might have asked why the leaders who assigned us to small town Nebraska, who supposedly made these assignments based on divine revelation, didn't know that these towns weren't interested in what we had to offer, but that kind of honest inquiry was discouraged in The Way. Five of the seven people in our PFAL class were signed up by others, but we got to run the class, so the spiritual pressure was off.
Once we were done with the class, we kind of sleep-walked through the rest of the year. I've mentioned before how obeying "leadership" was a central plank in The Way's platform. Out on the WOW field, our leader Steve, who we were supposed to believe was inspired by God to lead us properly, was a twenty year old who was overly impressed with his own position as leader and more concerned with seducing women, both Way women and those whom we were supposed to be "sharing the Word" with, than actually leading. At one point he was spending time alone with a woman whose husband worked nights. (The Way was was big on doing things two-by-two, and for good reason!) When the husband found out about this there were threats, but Steve extricated himself from the situation without getting beaten up.
One series of events that spotlighted his incompetence, dishonesty and manipulation as a leader involved finances. One of the things that was required of a WOW was working a part-time job. Everyone was to contribute to the "family fund" which was used for common expenses, with the details to be worked out by each "family". Three of us gotten jobs around town in various restaurants. Steve got a "job" doing work around our rental house, including putting in a new lawn. Steve was paid via a decrease in our rent equal to what he and the landlord agreed would be his monthly wages. Since Steve wasn't actually receiving any money directly from the landlord, he was given money from our "family fund" equal to his wages, less whatever his contribution to the common expenses would be. The problem was that Steve never did any of the work that he was contracted to do. He slept in, or hung out with some of the local Way women while the rest of us were at work. Eventually our landlord realized that no work was being done and demanded that we pay back the rent credit that ostensibly covered Steve's wages. Of course we no longer had the money. To avoid being evicted Steve convinced his father to lend us the money, to be paid back before our term was up in August. I can't recall if Steve got a real job after that, or how close to the end of the year this was, but just before we left Kearney for good, we had amassed enough surplus in our common funds to pay Steve's father back. However, Steve's dad allegedly gave the money to Steve. We weren't able to confirm this since we did not have his father's contact information. The three of us had ended up subsidizing Steve's months-long indolence. So much for leadership.
I started this segment by saying how we were looking forward to being done with our commitment...and each other. The Way promoted the WOW experience as being likely to be the best year of your life. It was depicted as the opportunity to live and work with a team of likeminded believers, all with a common goal, blessed by God. We were assured that the assignments were divinely guided. The company line was that each four-person family was selected for optimum compatibility and our location was where there were sure to be people hungry for God's Word. I think my description of our time in Sidney debunked the idea that the location was ideal. Our interpersonal relationships were far from ideal as well. We really couldn't stand each other. On good days we could tolerate each others' presence, at best. Although we were supposed to be spending our days in pairs, actively recruiting converts, we hardly ever spent any time together.
I don't think anyone questions the part of the WOW commitment where you're supposed to witness for eight hours a day six days a week. I know we never did it in Sidney. One of the logistical problems of a four-person team all working part-time jobs and still attempting to do things as a group was that it's close to impossible to coordinate everyone's schedule. Someone would get off work at 11:00 and wait around until someone else got off work. Then there's the lack of people to witness to. The population was only around 5,000. At an average of 3.5 people per household, that's about 1400 doors to be knocked on. That's 350 doors per person, or 700 doors per pair. Even at a leisurely 10 doors per day per team, we would have knocked on every door in 12 weeks. At first we made an effort, we knocked on doors, we went to bars and diners, we mingled in public. But by the time we got to Kearney we were burned out. And we certainly made no effort to try to convert anyone. Once the PFAL class that we ran was over, we effectively quiet quit and skated along until August.
None of us wanted to admit that we just weren't doing what we were supposed to be doing. The three non-leaders, Gail, Rosemarie and I, were disillusioned by Steve's lack of leadership. He seemed to be happy to sit around at night watching television at the home of Doreen and Janet, two local Way women. Gail spent a lot of her time hanging out with Freddie, a local Way guy. Rosemarie and I spent the afternoons at the lake and hit the bars in the evening. I consumed a lot of beer and had a succession of Jack Daniels bottles in my bedroom.
Finally August arrived. Steve, as a member of the Way Corps, left a week early to participate in "Corps Week". Gail, Rosemarie and I headed out of Kearney for the last time. I dropped off some of my belonging in Lincoln, where I would be living the following year, and drove straight through to Way headquarters in Ohio. We got robbed at the hotel we were staying at. The tent that my cousin John sent via some New York Way people had no tent pegs. It rained heavily on the last night and my tent flooded. We received our blue WOW pins in a recognition ceremony at the first night of The Rock of Ages. I never saw Steve again. It was 21 years before I saw Gail again on a road trip to the East Coast. Rosemarie was my roommate for six months in Lincoln, and then we never saw each other again. I spent a week in New York with my parents before heading back to Nebraska.
Continuing my pattern of ignoring red flags and subsequently doubling down, towards the end of this year, instead of cutting my losses and leaving The Way, I decided to apply to enter The Way Corps, The Way's alleged leadership training program. In the meantime I would participate in a "WOW Vet" outreach program in Lincoln.
Start from the beginning:
Part I