What about your own personal interaction, did she ever cross swords, rub up, or abuse you? Did she chuck you out?
Projecting itself as the be all and end of all of religion, BKism is a kind of trap. If you leave it because you see through it, or you finally admit how crap it all is, or that you don't actually like the people or the leaders, then where do you go? What happens to you?
Is there an even more supreme supreme religion"? (In India, I suppose the PBKs would claim that. I read there was even an "Advance Advance Party"). Therefore, having committed so much, left behind and lost so much, I suppose they just stick it out. I suppose for a certain proportion of people, structure and a safe "routine" is appealing, especially if you're a little unstable.
And for a small percentage, it's their retirement plan.
But let's also put ourselves in the shoes of the centers-in-charge or leaders and wonder how much crap they have to go through from nutty followers projecting on them? The pressure pot conditions of "Intentional Communities" is something that has been studied. In BKism, you have something half way between an intentional community and a highly intense group therapy thing going on, one in which they "know" psychological problems arise, e.g. "karma" being settled or the "dirt" being "beaten out of the carpet" to use two BKisms that come to mind.
I remember life in a small centre and how claustrophobic it was. How always under the watchful eye you are. And for some BKs how alienating it must be, e.g. some centres have also zero following, it's just the BK talking to themselves (aka Baba). Not healthy environments for various types.
Ditto, I remember them demanding my interests were subjugated to the needs and wants of the centres, e.g. being discouraged to move around, being kept in the same place for the (financial) sake of the centre.
Of course, it's never stated in that way but keeping the numbers up, and the money coming in, is of prime importance to keep centres alive. They never tell you all of this part. Or at least, perhaps not until you become one.
Legally, they should not call her "doctor". It's one of their narcissisms again.
OK, let's keep discussion of her to the thread about her, here;
Didi Nirmala Australia and stick to mental illness here.
Around 9:00 minutes, she briefly references the problems that arise within BKism amongst families and within the BK cult, but this is really dull and boring. The same old stuff they have been regurgitating since the 1970s or 1980s.