Cults are usually imagined as loud, dramatic affairs involving chanting, isolation, and questionable fashion choices. Grave-Cults: Love, Loyalty, and Control advances a less theatrical but more unsettling theory: cultic structure is not rare or fringe, but woven into everyday life.Families, friendships, marriages, workplaces, professional organizations, and government roles all operate through shared beliefs, rituals, and expectations of loyalty. Oaths, contracts, traditions, and unspoken rules quietly organize belonging.A signature, a promise, or the understanding that obedience keeps the peace is usually enough. No robes are required.Drawing a direct line between cults and culture, Aurora Mizutani argues that micro-cults form wherever power concentrates and dissent is punished. These systems reward compliance, frame questioning as disloyalty, and treat exit as betrayal, often while insisting they act "out of love" or "for your own good."Written in clear, journalistic prose with a touch of levity to soften the blow, Grave-Cults gives language to experiences many people recognize but rarely name.It explains how control hides behind tradition, why silence is mistaken for harmony, and why the moment someone stops obeying is often the moment the system reveals itself. Because when belonging disappears the instant you disagree, what you were part of was never just a relationship. It was a cult.