Monday, March 31, 2008

[MLM Survivors Club] Re: Quixtar/Worldwide Group

--- In mlmsurvivorsclub@yahoogroups.com, "leslie_smith_79"
<leslie_smith_79@...> wrote:
Leslie,

Thanks so much for your response. Since that post, Matt has moved out
and is living on his own. He is working in retail, for a company that
has filed bankruptcy and is trying to find another job. Without a
college education, he is finding it difficult. He is still involved
up to his eyebrows in Quixtar, oh I mean Amway, and will not listen to
anything that I have to say. I just have to "Let go, Let God".

Jenna

>
> I'm so sorry. I am 28 now and had an experience similar to your son.
> I didn't drop out of college; however I only stayed in because of
> family and peer pressure to "have a college degree." I felt college
> was a complete waste of time. I felt disconnected from my fellow
> students. I was going somewhere with my life and everyone else was
> going to be stuck with a dead-end job. I pitied them and avoided the
> parties and read my Quixtar-recommended books instead. At the business
> meetings your son is told that his professors are well-intentioned
> buffoons, that nothing he studies is applicable to the real world and
> that college is a huge waste of time. He will asked if his professors
> all drive sports cars and live in mansions. When he replies that not
> all of his professors do these things, your son's upline will ask him
> why he is wasting his time learning from such unsuccessful people.
>
> I would encourage you to have your son do his own independent research
> on Quixtar. If he is going to business meetings ("functions") then he
> will be somewhat indoctrinated into the system and so it will be best
> for him to take baby steps. If you can get him to skip a couple
> of "functions" and then suggest that he do research it will help. I
> believe that if I had not started skipping any functions I may have
> never seen the light.
>
> The best advice I can give is for you to show him that you love and
> support him no matter what his decisions are. When he does come to
> realize the lies he has been told and the untold negative effect the
> business has had on his life, he is likely to feel betrayed,
> incompetent and wiill feel as if he cannot make even simple decisions
> on his own. I have been out of Quixtar for two years and am just now
> starting to feel as if I once again have full control of my own life.
>
> Good luck! Hang in there. You are not the first people in this
> position and there is hope.
>
> --- In mlmsurvivorsclub@yahoogroups.com, "jennasknnr" <jennasknnr@>
> wrote:
> >
> > I have a 20 year old son involved in this scam. He is easily led and
> > has spent the last two years throwing money down the drain and
> > destroying all of his family and personal relationships over this
> > "business". He wasted two years of college and now has decided not
> to
> > go back because "he doesn't need to go to college to be successful".
> > This decision is supported by his "upline" and the rest of the idiots
> > that are making money off a kid. I am at my wits end. He is totally
> > brainwashed, we (his father, brother and I) can't get through to him.
> > I am heartbroken to see this great kid go down the drain mentally,
> > physically and financially. Any suggestions?????
> >
>

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