Woman Raised In Polygamous Cult With 44 Siblings Shares Strict Rules She Lived Under

Janet Z grew up in a world where family life looked very different from most people’s. She was raised in a polygamous ‘cult’ with 44 siblings, four mothers, and one father, and she has now opened up about the strict rules that shaped her childhood.

Born in 1994, Janet said she was brought up in a breakaway group of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, which was led by convicted sex offender Warren Jeffs. Her early life centered on a large household, a strict belief system, and clear rules about what girls and women were expected to become.

The family lived together in a 13-bedroom, 15-bathroom home, where Janet says women were treated like ‘second-class citizens’. With so many siblings and several mothers under one roof, daily life was built around obedience, chores, religious lessons, and the idea that men held the authority.

From a young age, Janet said she was taught that modest clothing was expected. But the rules went much further than what she wore, as girls were also raised to believe marriage into plural family life was something they should accept and even value.

The now 32-year-old, from the US, said: “My whole life, I was raised that it was a privilege to marry a man as one of his wives.”

“As a woman, you are treated like a second-class citizen.”

Janet said the system could place a heavy burden on women, especially in homes where one man had several wives and many children. She did not describe every man the same way, but she said the structure often left wives carrying emotional and family pressure with little control.

“Some men are amazing, but some do not consider their wives’ emotions or how hard it is to raise their family with so many kids.”

“The way the cult was set up is that your dad is your leader, and when you marry, your husband becomes your leader.”

Janet with ex-members of the religionSWNS

Why the rules shaped almost every part of her childhood

The way Janet describes it, the rules were not limited to religion or marriage. They affected how children learned, how girls saw their future, and how much freedom each person had inside the family home.

That is why her story is not only about growing up with a huge number of siblings. It is also about being raised in a system where authority moved from father to husband, and where women were expected to fit into a role long before they were old enough to question it.

Stories like Janet’s often raise wider questions about control, religious pressure, and women’s choices, especially when a childhood belief system decides what adulthood is supposed to look like.

Life in the home also followed a tight daily routine. Janet said all 44 siblings had strict rules to follow, including waking up at 8am each day before spending an hour going over religious scripture.

The children’s schooling also took place at home. Their lessons included English, math, and history, and the school day usually ran until 3.30pm, giving the household a set routine from morning into the afternoon.

Janet added: “We had a very strict schedule with homeschooling; my biological mother would lead the lessons, and my sister would help out, too.”

“In 2010, all of my younger siblings went to school because homeschooling was becoming too overwhelming with so many kids.”

“I stayed home to help run the household and graduated from online school.”

As Janet got older, the life she had been taught to expect began to feel different from the reality she was seeing around her. By the time she was 20, she decided to leave and build a new future in Salt Lake City.

Before leaving, Janet had already taken on many adult responsibilities inside the family home. With several sisters already married, she said much of her time went into keeping the household running and helping care for younger siblings.

“A lot of my sisters had already married, so I was doing a lot of cooking, cleaning and helping raise my siblings,” Janet added.

Janet decided to pursue a new life when she was 20SWNS

What changed when she left

Leaving at 20 meant stepping away from the future Janet had been raised to expect. Instead of becoming one of several wives in the same system, she chose a new life outside the household and outside the rules that had shaped her childhood.

That move also gave her space to look back on the way she was raised. In similar coverage of her story, Janet has been described as a stay-at-home mom in St. George, Utah, who now shares parts of her experience online to raise awareness about life inside the group, according to the New York Post.

Her account helps explain why leaving was not just a move to a different city. It was a break from a full belief system, a family structure, and years of being told what her role as a woman should be.

“My dad was worried for me, he said he thought I was going to waste my life, and he didn’t know what was going to happen to me.”

Janet has described life after leaving the ‘cult’ as ‘freeing’. She also said her biological mother eventually managed to leave the lifestyle, showing that Janet was not the only one in the family who began to question the system.

Her father, who Janet stayed in contact with after she left, died in 2024.

Janet continued: “My mum still lives in the family home. She is living her life separately from the rest of the family, but still lives there.”

“She realized she didn’t want to be told what to do all the time by men and decided to leave.”

For Janet, her mother’s decision added another layer to the story. It showed that even after years inside the same home and the same rules, it was still possible for someone to decide they no longer wanted men making every major choice for them.

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