For me, it took a long time to be able to say the words out loud "I was a victim of abuse" or "I was abused". Being able to finally identify as a victim allowed me to start accepting that what happened to me was abusive, it was wrong, and it wasn't my fault. I found it to be empowering in a way. For so long I had tried to dismiss or ignore what had happened, that finally being able to say it out loud was a huge step.
It saddens me that the word victim is used in such a negative, even derogatory, way sometimes. "Oh she's acting like a victim" and things like that. So if I cry I am weak? If I hurt emotionally because of what someone else did to me, then I am not being "strong enough"? A victim isn't someone who is weak, pathetic, or looking for pity. A victim is someone who has been harmed, injured, or killed by a person, event, accident, etc.
Identifying as a victim is helping me to stop blaming myself for what happened. This wasn't something I chose to have happen to me, this wasn't something of my doing, this wasn't my fault. Being able to say I was the victim and he was the abuser is helping me to put the responsibility where it truly belongs. Does it make me weak? Does it make me less of a survivor? Does it make me someone to be pitied? No, I don't think it does. It makes me someone who has lived through some pretty shitty stuff, but is still here, still fighting, still trying.
I guess I am saying, if identifying as a victim is helping you on your journey to healing, then f*ck what others think about it. The same goes with identifying as a survivor. If it is helping YOU then it doesn'the matter what others think.