Yes, you were victimized. No, it is not your entire identity years later. And yes, before you bother, I have experienced SEVERE trauma in my life. |
It isn’t meant to be. I’ve been there, and I understand that there is a deeper pain that OP must deal with in order to let go of the anger. It feels safer to be angry than it does to let the anger go. It’s not fair. And it sucks. OP has been to loss of different therapies, but it isn’t taking because she is hasn’t accepted she is the only narrator of her life. When she starts to do that, then her therapy will kick into action. It will feel worse before it gets better. OP doesn’t deserve to feel this way. She deserves to find peace. I am rooting for her. |
But the perception that someone has made victimhood their whole identity is an incorrect one. There might be situations when this would apply but you'd need to interact with this person regularly over time to see that they think of themself this way and interpret every aspect of their lives through this lens. On here, you are reading a person's thoughts about their experience relating to being victimized, and only that. It's the topic of the thread. It should not be necessary for a person to put their entire identity in context in order to convince you that this is not their entire identity but just one thing that they struggle with. I am a rape and sexual assault survivor. I also experienced childhood abuse and neglect. Those things had a serious impact on me and continue to impact me. However, if you asked me what my identity is, I'd talk about being a mother, about my work and one serious longterm hobby I have, about my spiritual beliefs and ethical priorities. I probably would not even mention my identity as a survivor unless it was a context in which that was obviously relevant. Sure, it is something that comes to mind often when I encounter triggers, but it's not my entire identity by a long shot. This would be like if someone came on here and wrote at length about struggling to get over the death of a loved one, how painful and difficult that was and how even years later they still struggled with it, and multiple posters replied "you're not that special" and "let it go" and "stop making this your whole identity." It's this myopic belief that just because all you know about a person is the worst thing they deal with, that means that's all there is to them and it's the only think they ever talk about or think about. People are complex. |
Have you actually talked to people in previous generations? And compared it with talking to people now with all the trauma mentality? Of course everyone is going to have petty angry thoughts and literature is going to be full of them because that makes for drama. But people have lived through REAL hardship and not only survived but managed to achieve more happiness than people today who live during the best of times. |
You are romanticizing. I mean one thing you seem to miss is that the idea of "achieving happiness" wasn't really a life expectation for a lot of people until the rise of the middle class in the 20th century. Most people's lives were hard and relatively short and while they sought comfort and joy in their lives, the idea of having decades of stable "happiness" was unrealistic because most people had to work hard, backbreaking jobs (whether physical labor, service jobs like maids or cooks, or caring for children and animals at home without any modern conveniences including refrigeration, running water, etc.). Yes, they absolutely spent years angry over traumatic events in their lives. My grandmother and her sister had a rift in their teen years over marriage and babies and did not speak to each other for nearly 50 years, and when they did, the first thing my grandmother said was "still think you're better than me, huh." I was there. This is a woman who survived immigrating to the US with nothing, the Great Depression, WWII, and raised nine children mostly on her own because my grandfather was a drunk who died when most of the kids were still very young. And she also spent half a century angry at her sister over hurts she experienced as a teen. You might know some inspiring people who survived great hardship and still found lasting happiness. But the idea that this is how all peopel used to be is just some silly notion you've acquired from watching Hollywood and historical novels glamorize traumatic events like war and famine. The truth is that people who experience trauma have always struggle deeply, that suicide, depression, family dysfunctions, etc. have been extremely common throughout all of history. The mistake you are making is thinking that because people TALK about these issues now, instead of bottling it up and pretending it didn't exist, people are more fixated on these issues. Nope. The talking is healthy and saves lives and helps more people find peace and happiness. That stoicism that you are confusing with strength was actually toxic AF. |
Op, how are you feeling after reading all these opinions and advice? |
I found the exercise useful. Just getting it out was helpful and a lot of the responses from peopel who identify and have experienced similar challenges really helped me feel less alone. I actually also even find it useful, to a point, to engage with the critics or people who give advice I think is bad or unhelpful. Because even just being able to articulate why I think that criticism is unfair or why a very common bit of advice actually doesn't help someone in my position at all helps me to express some of the frustration and anger I feel over this situation. So it's like a form of power, just having the knowledge of self and of my situation to be able to say "no you are wrong" and calmly explain why. The actual anniversary is not for another week and a half or so but I think this was a good way for me to get out some of the extra "ick" feelings that came up. It will probably also make my therapy session next week more productive because it has helped me to clarify some feelings and thoughts. The sounding board aspect is really useful for that. Anyway, thanks for the listening ears, all. Even the ones I disagreed with or who think I'm just stuck in a victim mentality or whatever. Sometimes it really is enough to just talk it out. |
OP, would you like some petty revenge ideas? Normally I'd say to take the high road, but this person sounds pretty evil and you've certainly tried to get over it in more mature ways.
I'm serious. |
Well now you have to share. Everyone needs some petty revenge ideas. |
Honestly I think you have every right to be angry. Do whatever you want. No one has walked in your shoes. F it. |
This has got to be one of the most tedious threads ever. |
OP. I say this with nothing but love. One verbal exchange, even a humiliating one, is not grounds for someone to be killed or to have their will to live taken away. It's not grounds to take their kids or anything else you mentioned. I am a bit concerned that you may misinterpret the lovely messages of support you've gotten as proof that your intense wishes for harm to befall this person are appropriate. If this person had murdered your child or something like that, your post would be emotionally on key and appropriate. But lots of people get into verbal tiffs, and it isn't a death sentence. Don't. Do. Anything. Harmful. |
Fighting feelings intensifies them. It's like the kids' book, Going on a Bear Hunt - the only way through, is through. You can't go over it. You can't go under it. You have to really feel it. You have to go through it. |
I’m going to take the OP’s word for it that it was that bad. |
It wasn't "they should die for it" bad. Especially since OP's own story is that everyone sided with the villain. It doesn't add up. Not saying OP wasn't traumatized or that their hurt isn't valid. But this isn't about hurt, this Is about an all consuming desire for vengeance. |