When we have a victim mentality, we filter our entire existence through a paranoid narrow mental lens that is used to perceive other people and reality.
While it’s important to claim the role of victim if we have genuinely been victimized or abused,ย we cannot move on with our lives unless we step out of the victim role and into the survivor role.
Table of contents
- What is a Victim Mentality?
- How Self-Victimization Develops
- 9 Benefits of Being a Victim
- The Dark Side of Playing the Victim
- 23 Signs of the Victim Mentality
- How to Stop Being a Victim
- How to Deal With the Victim Complex in Other People
- What is a Victim Complex?
- What is the Difference Between Victim Mentality and Victim Complex ?
- 14 Signs of the Victim Complex
- How to Deal With Self-Proclaimed Victims
What is a Victim Mentality?
Victim mentality is a psychological term that refers to a type of dysfunctional mindset which seeks to feel persecuted in order to gain attention or avoid self-responsibility. People who struggle with the victim mentality are convinced that life is not only beyond their control, but is out to deliberately hurt them. This belief results in constant blame, finger-pointing, and pity parties that are fuelled by pessimism, fear, and anger.
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Simply put, having a victim mentality means that you blame other people and circumstances for the unhappiness you feel.
How Self-Victimization Develops
No one is born with a victim mentality, just as no one is born clinically depressed or anxious. Instead, the victim mentality is an acquired personality trait, meaning that it is the result of early life conditioning and coping mechanisms.
Most victims were victimized in some way as children, whether that was through physical abuse, sexual abuse, emotional abuse or psychological abuse. Self-victimization can also develop through the codependent relationships we had with our parents, or simply by observing and adopting the unhealthy victim mentality exhibited by one or more of our family members.
However, although what happens to us as children is completely beyond our control, it is our responsibility as adults to step into our power and reclaim responsibility for our happiness.
9 Benefits of Being a Victim
Playing the victim actually has a number of juicy perks. These rewards make it very difficult to break out of such a mindset, which is why most victims seem to be so emotionally invested in perpetuating this type of toxic behavior.
Some of the perks include the following:
- Not having to take responsibility for anything
- Other people lavishing you with attention
- Other people feeling sorry for you
- Other people are less likely to criticize or upset you
- You have the โrightโ to complain
- Youโre more likely to get what you want
- You feel interesting because you get to tell people all of your stories
- You donโt have to feel bored because thereโs too much drama going on
- You get to avoid and bypass anger because youโre too busy feeling sad
Can you see some underlying patterns starting to emerge here?
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Playing the victim actually gives you a lot of power: power to avoid responsibility, power to feel โrighteouslyโ sad and persecuted, power to avoid uncomfortable emotions, and power to manipulate other people.
The Dark Side of Playing the Victim
The majority of people who play the victim do so unconsciously, or unintentionally. Even so, the victim role does involve a tremendous amount of manipulation and string-pulling. People in relationships or friendships with victims often report feeling like puppets who mold into whatever the victim believes they are or wants them to be.
Having other people feel sorry for you is an easy way to wrap them around your little finger. This unconscious craving to control others through their sympathies is really only a way for the mind to reinforce its belief in the โIโm a victimโ ego identity.
There is a lot of comfort and artificial โsafetyโ in playing the victim identity. Not only does it reward you with not having to take responsibility for any of your behavior (because โother peopleโ are always responsible), but it also prevents you from feeling uncomfortable emotions like guilt and anger, while at the same time making you feel โcared forโ by others.
Playing the victim is also often used by abusive and/or sociopathic people who use this role to keep a tight emotional leash on those close to them. For example, a narcissistic person might constantly put down their partner, then fixate on the one time their partner snapped and called them a โmonster,โ making it seem like they are in fact the โabused one.โ Or a physically abusive person might use the excuse that they โalways have to put up with the other personโ as a reason for beating up their partner.
As we can see, the โpoor meโ attitude can be used on both sides of the human spectrum: both seemingly โnormalโ people and more extreme and dysfunctional psychopathic people. For example, in codependent relationships, self-victimization can be used by the enabler and the abuser, and sometimes both at the same time in a kind of power struggle.
There is no one โtypeโ of person that fits into the victim role, so itโs wrong to say that only narcissists or sociopaths adopt this role. I have personally seen all types of people play this role: from sweet old grandmothers to teenagers, mothers, fathers, professionals, and even โspiritually awakenedโ people.
23 Signs of the Victim Mentality
Are you, or is someone you love, playing the victim? Here are some common signs to look out for:
- Youโre constantly blaming other people or situations for feeling miserable
- You possess a โlife is against meโ philosophy
- Youโre cynical or pessimistic
- You see your problems as catastrophes and blow them out of proportion
- You think others are purposely trying to hurt you
- You believe youโre the only one being targeted for mistreatment
- You keep reliving past painful memories that made you feel like a victim
- Even when things go right, you find something to complain about
- You refuse to consider other perspectives when talking about your problems
- You feel powerless and unable to cope effectively with a problem or life in general
- You feel attacked when youโre given constructive criticism
- You believe youโre not responsible for what happens in your life (others are)
- You believe that everyone is โbetter offโ than you
- You seem to enjoy feeling sorry for yourself
- You attract people like you (who complain, blame, and feel victimized by life)
- You believe that the world is a scary, mostly bad, place
- You enjoy sharing your tragic stories with other people
- You have a habit of blaming, attacking, and accusing those you love for how you feel
- You feel powerless to change your circumstances
- You expect to gain sympathy from others, and when you donโt get it, you feel upset
- You refuse to analyze yourself or improve your life
- You tend to โone-upโ people when it comes to sharing traumatic experiences
- Youโre constantly putting yourself down
As we can see, the permanent sense of being a victim is deeply destructive both internally, and externally.
How to Stop Being a Victim
If youโre reading this article because you suspect that you might be clinging to a victim mentality, here are some tips that can help you step out of this toxic role:
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1. Start replacing โyouโ with โIโ
For example, instead of saying โyou make me feel so angry,โ you can replace that statement with, โI feel so angry when I hear you say that.โ This simple trick can help you learn to take more self-responsibility for your happiness.
2. See yourself as a survivor
A victim argues with life, a survivor embraces it. A victim dwells in the past, a survivor lives in the present. A victim believes theyโre helpless, a survivor takes back control over their life. Although the victim mentality is addictive, the survivor mentality is much more empowering in the long term. Once you start seeing yourself as a survivor, youโll begin to feel better about life and you’ll attract other people for the right reasons. Listening to a survivor is much more refreshing and inspiring than listening to a victim wallow in self-pity.
3. Be kind and compassionate towards yourself
In other words, be careful about becoming a victim of being a victim! This role isn’t something you choose: you developed it as a result of childhood conditioning. Be gentle with yourself and practice self-love. Explore your core wounds and core beliefs that compound your victim identity, and replace self-loathing with self-compassion. If youโre struggling to get past the victim role, practice self-care by seeing a therapist. Experiment with practices such as journaling, affirmations, NLP, CBT, and other forms of self-love. If you’d like a guided approach to deeper self-love, you may be interested in our Self-Love Journal.
4. Explore your mistaken beliefs
Mistaken beliefs create anxiety, depression, anger, and blame. A lot of these beliefs are lodged in the shadow side of our psyche, and can only be explored through deep shadow work. You will probably be stunned by how many types of mistaken beliefs you have unknowingly adopted!
5. Ask โWhat thought is creating this suffering?โ
All suffering originates in beliefs that go unquestioned and unexamined in our minds. When we attach to these thoughts, we suffer. Remember that you donโt need to believe the thoughts in your head: thoughts are simply fluctuations of energy that we assign meaning to. Practicing meditation can help you notice how transient thoughts are.
6. Practice being thankful
Gratitude is a simple but powerful way to remind yourself that life is not as miserable as you perceive it to be. Each day, try to find ten things that youโre thankful for. You might like to keep a gratitude journal in which you write these ten things down, or simply name them mentally. Try to feel sincerely thankful for having these things.
Learn more about how to journal.
7. Affirm self-responsibility
Start to notice all the ways you bypass self-responsibility. Be ruthlessly honest and examine how gaining sympathy from others makes you feel special and continues the cycle of pointing the finger at others. You might like to use an affirmation such as โI am responsible for my lifeโ or โI am empowered to create changeโ to help you reprogram this unconscious need to play the victim. You might also like to do something that builds your confidence and actually shows you that youโre capable โฆ or reflect on something in the past that you overcame successfully.
8. Perform an act of kindness for another
When we play the victim we tend to be solely focused on ourselves. Get yourself out of your head by doing something nice for another person you love. Realizing that you can feel good without manipulating another person is an important way to cut the addiction the self-victimization.
How to Deal With the Victim Complex in Other People
Weโve all met those people who are perpetually moping and complaining about their lives.
These people seem to carry around the belief that the world is against them and appear to almost enjoy feeling miserable. In the field of psychology, these people are referred to as individuals who suffer from a victim complex; a type of neurosis that revolves around obtaining pity from other people.
What is a Victim Complex?
The victim complex is a mindset that develops through life and is triggered mainly through childhood conditioning. People who suffer from the victim complex perpetually see themselves as the victims of other people or circumstances. This warped self-perception leads to the desire to gain affection and attention from other people while simultaneously avoiding self-responsibility and blame.
What is the Difference Between Victim Mentality and Victim Complex?
They both sound so similar … so what is the actual difference?
While both can (and do) overlap, the victim mentality is more of a common issue. Most people struggle with a victim mentality at one point or another during life. The victimย complex,ย on the other hand, is an insidious and deeply rooted behavioral pattern that defines a person’sย entireย outlook on life. Unlike the victim mentality (which generally tends to be short-lived), the victim complex can define a person’s life for years, even an entire lifetime.
In other words, the victim complex is far more serious and pathological than the victim mentality.
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14 Signs of the Victim Complex
People suffering from the victim complex will display a large percentage of the following symptoms:
- They will constantly put themselves down
- They will blame other people or situations for feeling miserable
- Theyโll refuse to analyze themselves in order to feel better about life
- They have a โlife is against meโ philosophy
- They feel powerless or helpless to change their circumstances
- They think others are purposely trying to hurt them
- They enjoy sharing their tragic stories with others
- Even when things go well, they still find something to complain about
- They believe that the world is a mostly bad and dangerous place
- They get upset and reactive when given constructive criticism
- They believe that everyone is โbetter offโ than them
- They tend to blame, attack, and accuse those they love for how they feel
- They see their problems as catastrophes and blow them out of proportion
- They donโt take responsibility for their happiness
I realize how frustrating living with, working with, or simply being around a self-proclaimed victim can be. I have dealt with my fair share of those struggling with victim complexes, but the important thing to remember here is that these people are genuinely suffering as a result of their mindset. These people genuinely believe that they are helpless and are at the complete mercy of other people and life. This learned helplessness is not developed as a way of manipulating you (although it can be used that way), it was developed as a result of early life abuse. So itโs important that we show compassion to the people in our lives suffering from victim complexes, without of course enabling their warped self-perception.
How to Deal With Self-Proclaimed Victims
So the question now is, how can you deal with victims without hurting them?
Handling those who struggle with the victim complex can be tricky, particularly because direct confrontation only reinforces their sense of being persecuted. Here are some tips that might help you:
1. Donโt get sucked into their feelings
Remember that victims are unconsciously seeking attention and validation. However, when you grant what they want, you will become emotionally entangled with them, which is bad for both you and them. Try to be a passive listener, without actively involving yourself in their pity party. Remember that they will look to you for sympathy as a way of reinforcing their victim mentality, but donโt give it to them. Simply remain neutral, unless you decide to practice point 3 (below).
2. Make it their problem
Victim complex sufferers will always find a way to pin blame and responsibility onto another person as a way of bypassing self-responsibility. They will also try to get you to agree with them to bolster their sense of feeling โright.โ Instead of agreeing, express how much confidence you have in their ability to handle the situation as mature adults.
3. Agree wholeheartedly
This practice uses a little bit of reverse psychology: go along with their resistance completely so that you completely blow the problem out of proportion. So if the victim is saying how terrible their life is at the moment, agree with them: life truly is awful and horrendous for them. This tactic can cause the victim to change their tune, saying, โwell I guess life isnโt that bad โฆโ
4. Donโt give advice
The truth is that victims donโt want to solve their problems, because that would undermine their sense of being victimized! Therefore giving advice to them is equivalent to speaking to a wall: youโre wasting your breath. When victims seek for โadvice and counselโ what theyโre really wanting is evidence that you care. This is the sad thing about victims: they confuse pity with love.
Try practicing these pieces of advice and youโll find that the victim either starts taking responsibility for their life or seeks sympathy elsewhere. Either way, you wonโt have to be the victimโs โvictimโ anymore.
Finally, donโt forget that the victim complex is a form of mental illness. Keep an open and compassionate heart, but donโt be an enabler.
***
The victim mentality and victim complex are truly insidious and destructive forms of behavior โ they taint friendships, ruin relationships, and destroy your self-esteem. But through applying the advice in this article, hopefully you will feel inspired and empowered rather than victimized by what is happening to you.
Do you struggle with the victim mentality? Or perhaps you have a loved one or colleague who suffers from the victim complex. Feel free to share and vent below!
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A very needed slap in the face. Thanks for the article :)
I guess I needed to read this.
I’ve just had another terrible fight with my partner because she’s convinced her closest friend secretely loaths her (for her religion) and is trying to sabotage our relationship by for example being nice to me (not flirty!).
The whole thing feels ridiculous (and tbh really unfair towards her friend). The other day I had to read through endless text conversations between my partner and her friend, looking for the slightest hint of this conspiracy. From the bottom of my heart: I can only see a good friend, albeit pehaps a bit too clingy.
Now my partner thinks I’m siding with the enemy because I told her honest to God I can’t see these supposed microaggressions. “You don’t understand me”, “you don’t have the full picture”, ” I can’t be with someone who supports a racist”… That’s what I’ve been accused of just because I wanted to mediate and suggested it could be a misunderstanding.
It’s exhausting and I have no idea what to do….
Here we go again with this victim blaming mentality. If you want people to stop being victims, then people need to stop having the perpetrator mentality.
Hi Shaun. There’s a difference between victim-blaming and victim-naming. We need to be able to name what’s realistically going on in order to understand it and evolve past it. This article isn’t about “shaming” victims, but empowering them to step into a new role.
As mentioned in this article right at the beginning:
Yes, we need to accept that we’ve been victimized. But no, we don’t have to stay in that place forever.
This article every bit of shaming the victim. No where in this article that shames the perpetrator. You can’t solve problems when you attack the effect, but not the cause.
How does a therapist determine the validity of a patientโs real experience? Do you check criminal or medical records to determine if the victimizing is self-proclaimed or real? How do you determine the degree of trauma that validates it as a victim complex vs. a real victim of physical, sexual, emotional abuse or neglect?
How many victims of childhood sex abuse, children of addicts, dire poverty, and an upbringing of closed fist beatings make up your clientele as spiritual advisors? Would your clientele define โvictimizationโ differently than those who grew up being repeatedly victimized in a predatory environment, dysfunctional family and a cycle of oppression without access to counseling?
Everybody does it though don’t they to a more or lesser degree. People rely on other people or co-depend in marriage. I look after someone else and live on my own so don’t depend on anybody, its about being responsible for yourself
How do you help someone who has the victim mentality get out of it, if they are unwilling to become self aware and listen to the advice and input of others? May be a rhetorical question but sincerely hoping someone in my life finds a way out.
Hey Trying to Help. Thanks for your open-heartedness.
Ultimately, you can’t force someone to change or even coerce them โ it must come from deep within them. With that being said, you can personally walk the talk and be an example for them. If there is an opening, you could even forward them an article like this in the future. Perhaps something will click within them. I hope that helps <3
My dearest best friend has always been pure as gold and sweet as Sweet Southern Tea. Then back in 2014 her eldest daughter became pregnant. She just modeled for an agency and going into her Senior year with a 4.0 and scholarship.
My best friend couldnโt see her being able to deal or even understand what was about to unfold. She begged me to go with her to get rid of this problem she said. I was totally against it, but she needed me to drive. From that day my best friend has spiraled down hill. Itโs been since 2014 and itโs now 2020 and in the past 6 years sheโs went on antidepressants, quit her job, had a nervous breakdown, and slept the past 4 years away avoiding life and lost her home. Moved in with her mother.. this child went on to college, quit the first year and moved to the big city to waitress for a living. She now has an 8 mo old child at age 22. Still a bad parent but I didnโt expect the best bc sheโs been spoiled her entire life. No gratitude, no humbleness, no care.
And my best friend is now at the lowest point sheโs ever been. Iโve tried to make her talk about it. She became homeless only to move in with me and sleep 24/7. Not once did she help us with anything. I asked her to do the dishes twice in 5 months. I got tired of the victim role and sent her back to her mothers. She will do for her new grandchild but not for anyone else. Iโve tried to address is and all she tells me is that she still agrees she made the right decision. I donโt think she really feels that way. I found her journals. Sheโs tucked it away but has beaten herself up so bad sheโs no longer herself. Now she plays the victim. Constantly. But I know itโs bc of what she did. She refuses to face reality. Even with this COVID-19 she doesnโt believe itโs that bad. Sheโs self destructing and refuses to get help!
Now Iโm angry!!! Hurt, and angry!!! I got involved too but today I found where that baby was further along and how she couldโve done that just kills my soul completely!!! Help me!!!
I go to al-anon, it helps a lot, along with a good bible reading church.
I’ve always been searching for what it is exactly I’ve been doing, feeling and why. I found too many abstract explanations none of which really gave me a satisfactory conclusion.I have low self confidence, am very anxious, pessimistic, self conscious, but have a strong sense of self respect and believe I’m righteous. I love to be in my own space, alone and in my head. It’s so much simpler that way.
Recently I identified that I loved playing the victim.
Victimizing myself justified everything so wonderfully. I have knowingly used this behaviour to manipulate arguments and behaviour. It makes me feel like I’m in control of atleast something and somehow adds to my self worth. I have been craving for sympathy and pity but not quite.
This is affecting my close relationships. I see it now.
This behaviour is definitely something I’m mirroring as one of my parents also exhibits these traits. I’ve been exposed to this mentality all my life and have been unknowingly and knowingly playing the victim card as well. So many years were bearable for me because I considered myself the real victim. This was something I felt obligated to do to protect myself and I found solace in. Till today, it’s sort of an escape mechanism. I had no intention of changing my behavior. But now knowing that all my other worries may be owing to this, I’d like to turn a new leaf . I’ve also hurt someone I love, quite recently.
I’m glad I can move forward from here and try to solve things.
Nothing has resonated with me more than this article and I’m grateful I’ve read this. Thank you for this insightful read!
Yup this is me and itโs costing me a lot . I donโt have any support at home just get told to stop playing the victim .
why are you still playing the victim? Read your own comment back to yourself… Can you not see that you are still playing the victim?
It feels horrid to realise this what I’m like, I don’t know how to stop.
Hi Belle. Love yourself the way you are right now because we all are here learning at different levels, there are no shame on make mistakes when we are students of life, you body, mind, heart, they all are used to play the victim game for too long, it is a safe territory specially for your mind and that’s why is hard to switch. Don’t try to solve the problem by thinking on the problem, simply switch in little shots, tiny changes everyday. Think as cleaning a house room by room, if you look the whole picture is too messy but if you concentrating in square meter by square meter realizing that you’re dealing with cleaning and organization instead of concentrating the whole mess (this is a metaphor for the victim mode) then it will feel and it will be easier and easir to get it done.
I feel like i have it but i purposely avoided the ways to control it. I self harm, cuz imma bad person. I often feel like being persecuted or sacrificed for some cause. Cigarettes, drugs, alcohol have a special place in my life!