Sterling_Institute_of_Relationship

Sterling Institute of Relationship

Sterling Institute of Relationship

Add article description


The Sterling Institute of Relationship is a for-profit corporation and counseling business run by A. Justin Sterling since 1979.[1] Focusing on heterosexual relationships through intensive, multi-hour trainings, male and female participants attend separate trainings. The company is based in Oakland, California.

Quick Facts Company type, Industry ...

A. Justin Sterling is also founder and president of "International Community Service Day Foundation", also located in California.[2]

Coursework

MSNBC reported that The Sterling Institute has been described as "John [sic] Bly meets Est".[3] The evolution from Erhard Seminars Training has also been noted in other media pieces.[2] [4]

Originally titled "Women, Sex and Power," and "Men, Sex and Power," the corporate web site now refers to the seminars as "The Women's Weekend" and "The Men's Weekend".[5] The main seminar is referred to by participants simply as "the Weekend," and was described in Details Magazine as exhibiting similar traits to "New Age quasi-spiritual movements."[6]

Participants must sign a standard waiver before beginning the weekend.[3] The waiver is presented to the participants upon registering for the weekend and paying the fees, and is also presented through a link on the registration page of the corporate Web site.

The main idea of the weekend is to teach men how to improve their relationships with women. In addition, participants are coached on being better friends, husbands, sons, fathers, and brothers, as the context of the weekend is simply; "being better men, being strong masculine men for the betterment of humanity. " [7] men are "slaves to their egos," and thus women are "100 percent responsible for the success of their relationships," [1] that a woman should "Never marry a man you don’t trust," and "If giving a man what he wants when he wants it requires you to be someone you’re not, or prevents you from accepting yourself, then he’s not the right man for you." Additional advice for women is detailed in Sterling's book, What Really Works with Men.[8]

The course itself runs all weekend, with breaks in-between, according to a reporter from Elle Magazine.[8] The many rituals that take place symbolize a "rite of passage" from youth to maturity,[2][7] and is a triumphant time of male bonding.[3] The weekend course typically ends in a "graduation ceremony", where the participants congratulate each other.[8]

Cult Controversy

There have been many articles and testimonials regarding this group being a cult. The Sacramento News and Review ran a cover story titled, "How to fix your marriage (by joining a cult*) *The true story of a weird dude and his cult-like following". "Justin Sterling became a millionaire preaching sexist ideology. Here’s why his kind is doing better than ever. And then out came the penises."[9]

According to this blog post titled, "Bad Vibes from the Sterling Institute for Relationships" on "Women of Grace", "The Sterling Institute was founded by A. Justin Sterling, whose real name is Arthur Kasarjian. Sterling’s career was temporarily sidetracked for a few years when he was convicted of grand larceny and impersonation..." The article goes on to site real world examples of what takes place at the cult-like seminars.[10]

Publications

Sterling, A. Justin. [1992] What Really Works with Men, Warner Books. ISBN 0-446-36439-8.


References

  1. Lubman, Sarah (April 17, 1996). "Bay Area Service Foundation's Mixed Legacy: Some Parents at South S.J. Elementary School Uneasy with Group's Rites, Ties". San Jose Mercury News.
  2. Lubman, Sarah (September 15, 1996). "Volunteers Bring Schools More Than They Bargained For: Oakland-Based Charity Pushes its Founder's Views on the Sexes". San Jose Mercury News.
  3. Walls, Jeannette (December 20, 1999). "Naked VIPs, on videotape: A new men's movement is taking the country by storm--and it has some past participants in a panic". MSNBC. NBC.
  4. Smart, Paul (August 15, 2002). "The Sterling Men Of Woodstock: A Series (Part I) - A line in the dirt: Woodstock's Sterling society redefines the modern man". Woodstock Times.
  5. Faludi, Susan (1991). Backlash: The Undeclared War Against American Women. Crown. p. 307.
  6. Yafa, Stephen (December 1999). {{cite news}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  7. Staff (December 1999). "Filmland Jitters Over Jerky Video". New York Post. pp. Page 6.
  8. Richards, Sarah Elizabeth (August 1, 2006). "To Love and Obey? - A seductive idea floating around the relationship cosmos is that we'd all be better off if men were men, and girls were girls. Is this misogynist bunk or the key to happily ever after?". Elle Magazine.
  9. RAHEEM HOSSEIN, Raheem. "The Marriage Guru". Sacramento News and Review. Sacramento News and Review. Retrieved March 22, 2024.
  10. Brinkman, Susan. "Bad Vibes from the Sterling Institute for Relationships". Women of Grace. Women of Grace. Retrieved March 22, 2024.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Sterling_Institute_of_Relationship, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.