This Part I of a two-part series:
Are you one of the enlightened that have been observing a specific kind of “spiritual economy” that can feel incredibly frustrating—especially when you see people spending resources they don’t have on solutions that aren’t grounded in reality? The idea that light and dark are two sides of the same coin is a powerful narrative, and it’s been the backbone of human belief systems for millennia.
If someone claims to be a Christian, you can confidently assume they believe in witchcraft. voodoo or obeah – depending on where they were born.
Here is a breakdown of why these beliefs persist and how we might approach the conversation.
Why the Beliefs Persist
It’s usually about psychological safety and agency.
- The Need for Order: The world is chaotic. Believing that a “spirit” or “witchcraft” caused a misfortune provides a “why.” Even a scary explanation is often more comforting to the human brain than the idea that bad things happen for no reason at all.
- Externalizing Blame: If my business fails because of Obeah, I don’t have to face my own mistakes. If my neighbor is doing better than me, it’s easier to blame Voodoo than to accept their hard work or luck.
- The Illusion of Control: Paying a healer feels like “doing something.” It provides a sense of agency in situations where people otherwise feel powerless (like chronic illness or poverty).
Understanding the Cultural Weight
In many regions, these aren’t just “superstitions”—they are deeply embedded cultural frameworks. When you tell someone these things aren’t real, they don’t just hear a scientific fact; they feel like you are attacking their heritage, their family’s wisdom, or their very sense of protection.
How to Foster Understanding
Directly “correcting” people often backfires because of cognitive dissonance—they will double down to protect their worldview. Here are more effective ways to shift the needle:
- Promote Critical Thinking and Skepticism: Instead of saying “Obeah isn’t real,” ask questions like, “Have you noticed if the healer’s predictions actually come true for everyone, or just some people?” Encourage them to track the results of their spending.
- Focus on Financial Literacy: Sometimes, framing the issue as an economic one is more effective. You can highlight the “opportunity cost”: what else could that money have bought? A better education for a child? A deposit on a home?
- Address the Root Causes: People turn to spiritual healers when the formal systems (medicine, law, banking) fail them. If we want people to stop paying for “cures,” we need to make actual healthcare more accessible and trustworthy.
- Model Radical Responsibility: Show through your own life that you can achieve positive outcomes through planning, science, and community support without relying on the supernatural.
Skepticism over Spirits
Promoting atheism may be the first resort but for anyone that grew up in a Christian family, you know how they hold onto illogical and non-scientific beliefs. They can’t easily stop believing. From a behavioral science perspective, direct ideological attacks rarely work. Some have actually internalized that something is wrong with the person trying to make them think critically. They, sadly, believe you will see the “folly” of your ways and return to the “fold”. It is the way people think that are part of a cult – it is extremely hard to get through.
How “the devil existing because God exists” functions in the human mind:
The “Oppositional Identity” Trap
God and the Devil are a package deal. It’s a binary system. However, if you try to remove one side (God) through atheism, the person often experiences identity threat.
- Backfire Effect: When a person’s core worldview is challenged, their brain’s amygdala (the “fight or flight” center) lights up. They don’t hear your logic; they feel like they are being hunted.
- The Vacuum: If you take away the “spiritual” explanation for their hardship without replacing the emotional comfort it provided, they will often scramble to find an even more extreme belief to fill the void.
Atheism vs. Secularism vs. Skepticism
While atheism is a conclusion about the existence of gods, it doesn’t always address the behavior of paying for Obeah or Voodoo.
- There are “atheists” who still believe in “good and bad energy,” “the universe” as some force, or “bad vibes.”
- Skepticism and Secularism are often more surgical tools. They focus on evidence and the separation of magic from state/medical affairs.
- If you promote atheism, you’re arguing about the existence of a creator. If you promote skepticism, you’re arguing about the validity of a transaction (e.g., “Is this healer actually curing your cancer?”).
The Economic “God-Gap”
In many places where Obeah and witchcraft thrive, it’s because the secular world has failed.
- If a person goes to a hospital and can’t afford the bill, but a spiritual healer gives them a “blessed oil” for $5 and a listening ear, the healer wins—not because of theology, but because of accessibility.
- We need to fix the broken hospital or the lack of police protection. Solving those issues is often what actually “cures” the belief in magic.
Secularization (the fading of religious influence) usually happens as a by product of:
- Economic Security: When people aren’t desperate, they don’t need “miracles.”
- Education: Specifically scientific literacy and the “scientific method.”
- Reliable Institutions: When the law works, you don’t need to pay a spirit to hurt your neighbor; you go to court.
The Blunt Truth: You can convince someone there is no God, and they might still pay a “psychic” to read their palms. The goal isn’t just changing what they believe, but changing how they process information.
What can we do?
When people invest their savings in spiritual healers or rituals to harm others, they aren’t usually acting out of “folly.” They are navigating a complex web of psychological shortcuts and biological responses. To help someone see this through a scientific lens, it helps to explain how the brain actually processes these experiences.
Here is a breakdown of the scientific evidence and psychological mechanics at play:
The Neurobiology of “Miracles” (The Placebo Effect)
One of the hardest things to argue against is a person’s lived experience: “I felt better after the ritual.” Science doesn’t deny they felt better; it just explains the source of that relief.
- The Internal Pharmacy: When a person believes a healer has “cleared” their energy, the brain releases endorphins, dopamine, and endocannabinoids. These are the body’s natural painkillers and mood lifters.
- Top-Down Processing: The brain’s prefrontal cortex (where expectations are formed) can actually “tell” the rest of the body to reduce pain or inflammation because it expects healing to happen.
- The Ritual Matters: Studies show that “theatrical” treatments (elaborate rituals, special tools, chanting) trigger a stronger placebo response than simple ones. The more “expensive” or “intense” the ritual feels, the more the brain self-medicates.
Cognitive Biases: Why We “See” Results
Our brains are “pattern-matching machines” that evolved to find threats. This leads to several glitches in logic:
- Confirmation Bias: If a healer says “a neighbor is jealous of you,” the person will suddenly notice every time a neighbor doesn’t smile. They ignore the 99 times the neighbor was friendly and focus on the one time they looked grumpy.
- Regression to the Mean: Most problems (illness, bad luck, financial dips) eventually get better on their own. If someone pays a healer at their “lowest point,” and things naturally improve a week later, they give the healer 100% of the credit for what was a natural statistical recovery.
- Illusory Correlation: This is the belief that two unrelated events are linked. “I paid for a spell, and the next day I got a job call.” The brain ignores the 50 resumes they sent out and credits the spell instead.
The “Cost” of Supernatural Harm
When people pay to “hurt” neighbors via spirits, science identifies a very real social and psychological cost:
- Erosion of Social Capital: Believing in witchcraft correlates strongly with low levels of trust in a community. Instead of collaborating with neighbors to improve the area, resources are spent on “spiritual defense” and “offense.”
- The Fear Feedback Loop: Constantly looking for “spiritual attacks” keeps the body in a state of chronic stress (high cortisol). This actually weakens the immune system, making the person more likely to get sick—which they then interpret as more witchcraft.
How to Have the Conversation
If you want to help someone, try the “Side-by-Side” approach rather than the “Debunking” approach:
- Validate the Feeling, Question the Price: “I understand you’re feeling stressed about your health, but is [Name of Healer] really the best use of your grocery money? Could we use that money for a specialist who can give us a physical scan?”
- Introduce the “Brain Power” Concept: “Did you know your brain can actually release its own medicine when you feel safe? You’re paying the healer for a feeling your own brain is creating. What if we found ways to feel that peace for free?”
- Highlight the Scam Patterns: Point out that many “healers” use Cold Reading (making vague guesses that sound specific) and Fear-Mining (telling you someone is out to get you to keep you dependent on them).
A Note on Compassion: Many people paying for “work” to be done against neighbors are acting out of fear or deep-seated insecurity. Addressing the underlying community conflict often dissolves the need for the “spiritual” weapon.
Change in these areas is usually measured in generations, not days. It requires a slow shift toward scientific literacy and, more importantly, a society where people feel secure enough that they don’t need to look for “magic” to survive.
