<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[Non Chosen News Blog]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[https://ncnblogger.wordpress.com]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[AdamS]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://ncnblogger.wordpress.com/author/adamncnblogger/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[Victimology]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<p>Usually I don&#8217;t like reading these kind of articles because they tend to come across as condescending, and most people who purport to be psychoanalysts are really just assholes projecting (see now I&#8217;m projecting, that loop could go round and round for a while). Freud, one of the great freaks of the 20th Century, comes to mind. But this one I found well written.</p>
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<h2>Five lies self-made victims tell themselves</h2>
<div>(NaturalNews)<br />
It&#8217;s a harsh title and at the risk of sounding harsher still, I should say that<br />
self-made victims go well beyond telling themselves the following lies. They<br />
tell themselves with the passion of a preacher. They feel them with such<br />
conviction that we may be more accurate by suggesting that these are lies that<br />
people <em>live</em>, not merely tell. And before I appear arrogant beyond<br />
belief, I confess that I have done my share of living these lies, as most people<br />
have. The challenge, as with most of the deeper issues, is to recognize<br />
them.In fact, it is more important than ever that we take responsibility and<br />
stop making victims of ourselves. The world is changing at an ever-increasing<br />
rate. If you, as a health<br />
conscious, environmentally aware person who is thoughtful of your life and your personal impact on<br />
the world, do not stand up, stand out and move beyond all forms of<br />
self-victimization and powerlessness, then we are in a world of trouble. The<br />
earth needs more enlightened people living on it if it is<br />
to survive. Self-victimization is antithetical enlightenment.Here are<br />
the lies. I&#8217;ll talk about what they share in common at the end.<strong>1.<br />
It&#8217;s not my fault.</strong> We all know this one. Feeling that if we admit our area<br />
of responsibility our entire house of cards will fall down, we remain defensive<br />
and don&#8217;t give an inch of truth. Someone else is to blame, period! If I lost my<br />
job, it&#8217;s because my boss is a jerk and my coworkers impossible. The fact that I<br />
was a bit lazy from time to time, well, so is everyone! That&#8217;s just human<br />
nature. Even the part that is my fault isn&#8217;t my fault, really.<strong>2. It&#8217;s<br />
all my fault.</strong> This one is tricky. We all know people (perhaps intimately)<br />
who play the personal<br />
responsibility card to the extreme. &#8220;Oh it&#8217;s all my fault. I&#8217;m such a loser&#8221;<br />
is the common stance. Some people use this tactic sarcastically in arguments,<br />
while others trudge through life with the &#8220;loser&#8221; mentality engraved on their<br />
forehead. Let&#8217;s take a closer look at it.</p>
<p>If you speak at length with a<br />
self-proclaimed loser (someone with deep issues related to personal worth) and<br />
if you are sincere and sensitive, before long you can get to the source of their<br />
ill-feelings about themselves. I can tell you that in the vast majority of cases<br />
these folks are blaming their parents or early caregivers for not providing love<br />
and attention. They are not lying about the facts. They are merely hanging onto<br />
them to their own detriment. So, blaming myself &#8211; insisting that I am a loser<br />
that screws everything up, is a distorted way of blaming my parents for not<br />
loving me. Self-blame to the extreme is nearly always other blame in<br />
disguise.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m not suggesting that unloving parents are OK or that<br />
childhood pain is to be scorned. This is far from the case. When we look at our<br />
childhood, however, perhaps we can look at it with the goal in mind of improving<br />
(taking more personal responsibility) today.</p>
<p><strong>3. I can&#8217;t do it.</strong><br />
There are indeed many things that you truly cannot do. Most of these genuine<br />
limitations aren&#8217;t worth discussing. If you are 40 years old, pudgy and a<br />
college dropout who wants to become an astronaut, then I&#8217;d throw in with you if<br />
you admitted that you couldn&#8217;t. However, with regard to the relevant issues in<br />
your life: work, money, relationships, health, community, etc&#8230;just substitute<br />
the word &#8220;can&#8217;t&#8221; with &#8220;won&#8217;t&#8221; and you are much closer to the truth.</p>
<p><strong>4.<br />
I did it myself.</strong> When self-made victims accomplish something worthwhile,<br />
they often claim, &#8220;I did it!&#8221; without recognizing perhaps multitudes of others<br />
who contributed directly or indirectly. Here&#8217;s why. Self-made victims see the<br />
world as &#8220;out there&#8221; or as &#8220;me vs. them.&#8221; In this light, the world and the mean<br />
people in it are always ready to impose and ruin things. When it does, the world<br />
is somehow to blame. When self-victimizers do succeed at something, they have<br />
succeeded (in their mind) in spite of the world and other people and this is<br />
indeed a personal triumph to be celebrated. People who have contributed to the<br />
effort are rarely included in the celebration because if they were, that might<br />
preclude blaming them for problems in the future. Of course, this paradigm is a<br />
perfect set up self-victimization.</p>
<p><strong>5. &#8220;They.&#8221; </strong>This one bugs me the<br />
most (Translation: I victimize myself when I hear this). &#8220;They&#8221; this and &#8220;they&#8221;<br />
that. Who is the ever present &#8220;they&#8221; that are messing with people? Whoever they<br />
are, self-made victims find great comfort and convenience in laying the blame on<br />
them.</p>
<p><strong>What do these five lies have in common?</strong> Fundamentally, they<br />
all function to reduce perceived anxiety. Until we have grown and developed to<br />
the point where we take an extraordinarily high level of genuine personal<br />
responsibility for ourselves (which represents the ultimate in personal freedom)<br />
we have varying degrees of anxiety about it. One student in our online NLP course put it this way:<br />
<em>Most people act as if confessing their role in a problem is akin to<br />
accepting blame for the whole thing. </em>This is far from true, but certainly<br />
feels true in the moment.</p>
<p>Learn more: <a href="http://www.naturalnews.com/033200_victims_lies.html#ixzz1Tv2GHE91">http://www.naturalnews.com/033200_victims_lies.html#ixzz1Tv2GHE91</a></p>
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<h3><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RuVuMslQWGs">Molyneux &#8211; Free Yourself From Self Abuse</a></h3>
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