Why You are NOT a Victim

*photo by me. please do not use without explicit permission*

Why You are NOT a Victim

I notice a lot of people on the internet and just in life seem to be pretty miserablese days, they're depressed, anxious, and even feel like life has no meaning. As someone who's felt all of those feelings for most of my life, I've often wondered why we get this way. This past year has been a huge battle for me, I've grown a lot and through a lot of tears, therapy sessions, and hard work, I've learned a thing or two about myself and about the victim mentality.

Let me stop anyone right now that feels like I mentioned above and yet has no desire to change themselves. If you want a place to rant, this isn't for you. If you're too angry about your life that you can't open your eyes to new ideas, this isn't for you. So like, seriously, don't waste your or anyone else's time.

Ok so a synopsis of my scars. I was adopted as a child but my adopted parents divorced shortly after. My father remarried an abusive woman and I was verbally abused and literally neglected until I was 17. At 17 I was hit, and threatened, so I moved out. I had an abusive boyfriend at 18. At 21 through therapy I discovered I was most likely sexually assaulted as a toddler. Theses are my main scars, there are others, but these are the ones that I have always felt ruined me as a person. I used to get mad at adoption, mad at mothers, mad at men. I would lash out, a lot like I see here, because I was angry that these people would do this to me, especially when I was a kid. I felt like I was broken because of the childhood I had.

I got a great therapist who nursed my wounds for a while, but eventually she kept saying, "you're not a child anymore, you're a woman. You aren't a victim because of them anymore, you're a victim by choice. I got so mad when she'd say that, I kept thinking, "Dr, I've been irrevocably scarred by my past, I can't see any different! My mind is broken!" But she kept insisting over and over again that I was the perpetrator now, that I had to own up to my feelings, and my sabotages, my anxieties, my depression. That it was my responsibility to be happy. That the past was the past and it will never redeem itself. Eventually her words started to sink in, and over the past say, 9 months I've made some majour breakthroughs, allow me to share them with you:

1. Positive Thinking

Depression is a sickness of the mind. Like the body, you need to nurse it back to health. There are literal neural synopsis that connect certain ways and affect your mood based on the language, tone, and emotion you feed yourself. I began owning up to my strengths, bracing each day with a smile and remembering the things I was grateful for. When I started to see my life in a dark way, I fought through it with all of the good I could think of.

2. Exercise and Diet

The way you eat and exercise will greatly affect your mood. If you aren't in good shape, your body will be tired which makes it harder to feel good and to fight back against the victim mindset you've set up for yourself.

3. Cut out Social Media

No, not completely, but wasting all of your time on a screen doesn't allow yourself time to process your own unique thoughts, think things through and work out your problems. It is a distraction from life and a hollow one at that. It is also a way to bitter remind yourself that others "have it so much better than you" Stop that. No one knows what sort of trials others are going through.

4. Serve

When you're a victim, it's easy to get caught up in everything that's wrong in your life, why it's wrong, who made it wrong, why it's not fair, how it affects you, how it MAY affect you.... on and on and on. When we loo past ourselves and start serving others, it gives us an opportunity to empathize with others, which helps us realize there's more to life than our experiences. Eventually you'll need to forgive those who hurt you, even if only in your heart, serving and developing a love for others builds the character needed to move on. I personally love to go and visit retirement centers or make $5 goodie bags for the local homeless. It can even be as simple as smiling at someone who looks like they need it.

5. Own your mistakes, stop making excuses

A lot of flaws I have I've blamed my childhood for. "I can't keep relationships because I never learned how. I have social anxiety so I can't go to school." But the thing is, I'm an adult. At some point, I just have to fix this mess, regardless of who's fault. I also realized a lot of flaws I have (I was messy, I am flakey when it comes to appointments) I would pass off as my perpetrator's fault, when in reality, I'm messy because I'm too lazy to pick up! I realized I need to stop being afraid of making mistakes, and just enjoy learning and growing. I'm proud to say I've gotten a LOT better with my anxiety, and I always make my bed every day!

It's small, and yeah, sometimes I find myself playing victim, but I am my own enemy now. I promise that this life is open to endless possibilities and endless dead ends, it all depends on attitude. (Although no, you can't fly, that is.... that's not included). There are people who will hurt you, scar you, people who deserve Karma badly. But they too have their issues. They too have their scars. Perhaps even they see themselves as victims, and that's why they hurt others. There is no validation, no reckoning, no peace from playing the victim. There is no romantic martyrdom by putting an "I am plagued with anxiety" or "I was raped and now I can't trust anyone" or "my ex husband abused me so now I use men". There is no excuse for poor decisions, no reason for permanent unhappiness. This MyTake isn't made for everyone, some people need time to be the victim, to heal, to grow, but when healing becomes hating, it's time to move onto the next part of the healing process: Taking back your life.

I was abused and neglected and deeply hurt by friends and family as a child. I am not a Victim. I am a Fighter.

10 2

Most Helpful Guy

  • https://www.gifstop.com/images/misc/clap03.gif

    You were definitely wronged, but only YOU can give those other, bad people, the power to destroy your life. You've taken back that power, and you're strong as a result.

Most Helpful Girl

  • I think your therapist sounds pretty cool, glad she helped you. How did you draw that pic, like what software? The detail is awesome.

    • I used clip art studio. Thanks! And yeah she's a down to earth lady, but she didn't do much, just kept insisting on things until I was ready to change

    • I looked it up, but is it really easy to use? Like if you were new to drawing manga and all that.

    • It's tremendously easier than Photoshop in my opinion. But it also doesn't have e as many options

    • Show All

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What Girls & Guys Said

11 10
  • These are my thoughts exactly. I prefer the term survivor. Calling myself a victim means I blame everyone else for my problems in life and refuse I move forward because it's easier to beg people for pity than to prove I'm worth more than it. Calling myself a survivor means I not only get to move on with my life so I can live it hap

    • Happily and fulfillingly, but that it also means that I used my past experiences as a lesson and reason to make myself stronger Having a victim mentality is toxic and stagnates your recovery so you'll still be as much of a victim twenty years down the road as you are now

  • Im... im writing this down.

  • Your story is not too different from my own, including adoption by an emotionally abusive mother figure.

    I have never been quiet about what happened to me, but I have never used it as a crutch. I'm not a "victim", I'm a survivor. I've been saying that for several years now.

    GREAT post!!

  • your stuff was rough but its psychological you can move on. you dont have to seethe scars in the mirror everyday. thats very different. if your scars were visible and your body was permanently torn to shreds affecting everything you did from go to the store to get a job to using a public bathroom to forget about a relationship... and nothing will change no matter how hard you work, its not simply something you can can decide is not here anymore.

    props t you of course but i notice people writing these things usually have scars they can walk away from. and the things that were done to them no one ever had to know about. its different when everyone can see it. everywhere. especially when its done to you as an adult when your life is supposed to be your responsibility and control.

    also your boyfriend you had as an adult. you chose him. you were not forced. you could have reached out to a support group for support. if hed abducted you and beat unrecognizable permanently disfigured into a coma and kept you hidden for 2 years until no one knew you anymore, then thatd be out of your control. and youd be spending life paying for things someone else did to you. and every time you saw your monstrous reflection you'd remember everything. and youd be too old to even hope to save enough money to fi anything. plus you have no skills.

    thatd be rough.

    in your case you're lucky you are young and physically in tact to where monitoring exercise and diet seem to be real accessible solutions.

    • 20 years not 2. -- for example.

    • i think your step mom and dad should be sued if they have caused long term daamge

    • some people walk around like they can do whatever they want. nothing has any consequences.. life has consequences. its a long series of consequences. for you and, should have for them.

  • Lol, you don't have the right to tell someone if they are a victim or not. Just because you were hurt doesn't make you the all-knowing deity of victims.

  • You're good at drawing :)

  • Feeling this!
    "I was the perpetrator now"
    ^this has been my truth for about a year.

    • This is a very hard thing to accept but imperative to break the victim cycle. Thanks for reading!

  • Wow... main reason y I don't get on social media. I don't eat a lot but not to the point of starvation. I have a question. Is try to always help others a bad thing, cuz I don't feel anything positive from it. I just feel somewhat sad. I ask people for help But the turn them down most of the time. But then people say I'm the bad guy when I turn down they're requests.

    • You're not a bad person for turning people down if you're not capable of helping. But a life of service holds so much more happiness and worth to it. You can't serve begrudgingly though. You need to mean it

  • I didn't even read the post. Too busy commenting on HOW AWESOME YOUR PICTURE IS!

  • nice mytake

  • In the Conservative brain, victims don't exist. Only losers.

    • i get what you say jacques. but the threads are thin. even true victims can get addicted to institutionalisation, hospitalisation, victimisation, welfare state dependence, negative attention etc.

    • @levantine99 In the Conservative brain... Look up what "working poor " means. Look up what "deadbeat dad " means.

    • i'd prefer an explanation i dont think i'll make any sense of it on my own. i can't be in your head.

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  • Can we talk?

  • I really admire you for saying this. I have a friend who always sees herself as a victim. She was once, but now she puts herself in situations where she will definitely be a victim again. She never wants to change and when I told her I don't want to talk about certain situations until she does something about them (seeks professional help, stops talking to really bad people), she got really mad.

    I really admire you and think it must be cool to be the hero in your own life. :)

  • I used that picture without permission.

  • I haven´t took the time to read a My Take in months. Yours really caught my attention. There are lot of things you pass trhough from what you have mention, and there will be challenges more ahead, just always remember the challenges are not the problem itself, is the way we face them. Also I want to congradulate you for exposing the importance of seeking for professional (in mental health) help to overcome internal issues very hard to overcome alone, many people just don´t realize that psychologist, psychiatrist are same as important as doctors of medicine.

  • Great!

  • Nice one, you were a victim of terrible abuse but you came out positive. I don't think I could do that as well as you did

  • You drew it?

    • She's lying

  • can we get this mytake taken down, the profile is gone.. and i dont need to keep seeing a featured mytake of a profile that is gone

  • This is a good take.

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