@Meadowsweet - thanks for your explication.
I certainly take your point that in e.g PTSD/trauma from chronic domestic abuse there may be patterns of needs/expectations/behaviours etc that both parties are entangled in.
But PTSD arises from many different types of traumatic events. Which is why I said that 'by their nature traumatic events can happen to anyone.' As indeed they do. This is a forum for people affected by PTSD from all sorts of shocking traumas, yes?
I've been endeavouring to follow this thread according to the your original point of view, with which I am in sympathy, that you're sick of supporters (of PTSD sufferers? or any person with a disability?) who think they are victims because they are not getting enough sex.
It seems to me that the thread has morphed into a protracted and painful session of intra-group castigation and focusing on this business of 'self-responsibility' - which kind of feels to me another, increasingly convoluted, way to beat oneself or others up for having been a target of CSA, rape or domestic violence.
Don't get me wrong - I agree with you already that there may be learned patterns of needs/expectations/behaviours etc. in DV. But that is absolutely no excuse or permit for an abusive individual to take advantage of patterns that could be seen as negative or as leaving oneself open to abuse. That line of reasoning does lead abusers to blame 13yos for enticing 50yo men to rape them (recent case in UK in which the barrister who blamed the 13yo for the rapes and was dismissed the bar) or for muggers to batter old ladies in the street, rob their purses and blame them because 'she was begging for it carrying her bag so carelessly in the street'.
For me, the fact remains that abuse is abuse. And malfeasance is malfeasance. No matter what form it's in or where it comes from or the circumstances in which it's inflicted or perpetrated. There's a lot of talk here about sufferers having to take responsibility for their part in it. I am still looking for the posts here - and debates in society generally - that insist on abusers having to take responsibility for abusing and the injuries their abuse has caused and going through therapy and/or prison to deal with their abusive activities. Many abusive or malfeasant actions/behaviours are just plain unlawful no matter how much or how little self-responsibility the abusee takes or is capable of taking.
I don't really know how to conclude this post but, with absolutely no intention to offend or further inflame, I find myself wanting to shout "For God's sake people, stop beating yourselves up!! Do you not see that this in itself is part of your pattern!! STOPPIT!! Yes, take steps to avoid more abuse in future but mainly just love yourselves in all your imperfections! You did not deserve to be abused, nor to be traumatised in whatever way you were.":hug:
I certainly take your point that in e.g PTSD/trauma from chronic domestic abuse there may be patterns of needs/expectations/behaviours etc that both parties are entangled in.
But PTSD arises from many different types of traumatic events. Which is why I said that 'by their nature traumatic events can happen to anyone.' As indeed they do. This is a forum for people affected by PTSD from all sorts of shocking traumas, yes?
I've been endeavouring to follow this thread according to the your original point of view, with which I am in sympathy, that you're sick of supporters (of PTSD sufferers? or any person with a disability?) who think they are victims because they are not getting enough sex.
It seems to me that the thread has morphed into a protracted and painful session of intra-group castigation and focusing on this business of 'self-responsibility' - which kind of feels to me another, increasingly convoluted, way to beat oneself or others up for having been a target of CSA, rape or domestic violence.
Don't get me wrong - I agree with you already that there may be learned patterns of needs/expectations/behaviours etc. in DV. But that is absolutely no excuse or permit for an abusive individual to take advantage of patterns that could be seen as negative or as leaving oneself open to abuse. That line of reasoning does lead abusers to blame 13yos for enticing 50yo men to rape them (recent case in UK in which the barrister who blamed the 13yo for the rapes and was dismissed the bar) or for muggers to batter old ladies in the street, rob their purses and blame them because 'she was begging for it carrying her bag so carelessly in the street'.
For me, the fact remains that abuse is abuse. And malfeasance is malfeasance. No matter what form it's in or where it comes from or the circumstances in which it's inflicted or perpetrated. There's a lot of talk here about sufferers having to take responsibility for their part in it. I am still looking for the posts here - and debates in society generally - that insist on abusers having to take responsibility for abusing and the injuries their abuse has caused and going through therapy and/or prison to deal with their abusive activities. Many abusive or malfeasant actions/behaviours are just plain unlawful no matter how much or how little self-responsibility the abusee takes or is capable of taking.
I don't really know how to conclude this post but, with absolutely no intention to offend or further inflame, I find myself wanting to shout "For God's sake people, stop beating yourselves up!! Do you not see that this in itself is part of your pattern!! STOPPIT!! Yes, take steps to avoid more abuse in future but mainly just love yourselves in all your imperfections! You did not deserve to be abused, nor to be traumatised in whatever way you were.":hug:
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