Something has been done to the word “victim.”
Not to its definition — that hasn’t changed. A victim is simply a person who has been harmed by an external force. That’s what the word means. That’s all it has ever meant.
But somewhere along the way, the word stopped feeling neutral. It started carrying something extra. Something that wasn’t in the definition. A weight. A flinch. An almost involuntary sense that calling yourself one says something unflattering about you — that it signals weakness or an unwillingness to move forward.
As if there is an implication of shame for NOT TAKING THE ABUSE STOICALLY.
It’s important we stop and ask where that feeling came from.
Because it didn’t come from the definition. It was added. And anything added had to have a driving force behind it.
So what has been driving the pejoration of this word, and for what reason?
There is a clear explanation that points to the abuser.
🧵
To understand what has been done to the word “victim,” you need to understand how words carry meaning.
Every word has two layers. The first is its denotation — the literal, dictionary definition. Precise. Fixed. A victim is a person harmed by an external force. That is the denotation. It has not changed.
The second layer is connotation — the emotional and associative meaning that surrounds a word beyond its definition. Connotation is not written in any dictionary. It lives in the collective subjective experience of the people using the word. It is built slowly, through repetition, through tone, through the context in which a word is consistently used. And unlike denotation, connotation drifts.
This drift has a name. It’s called semantic shift — the gradual evolution of a word’s perceived meaning through cultural and social use. When that drift moves in a negative direction, when a word that was once neutral begins accumulating shame, stigma, or weakness in its connotation, that process is called pejoration.
The word “victim” is undergoing pejoration.
Semantic shift can happen organically — through local culture, through repeated social exposure, through minute subjective interpretations compounding across a community over time. No conscious intent necessary. Just enough people absorbing and reflecting a feeling back into a word until that feeling becomes inseparable from it.
But there is a second way this happens. Connotation can also be pushed. Deliberately shaped by psychological motivation to move a word in a particular emotional direction. And in the case of this word — that motivation has a very clear and identifiable shape and source.
So we must ask ourselves: What kind of psychological motivation would deliberately push a neutral word toward shame? And more specifically — who benefits when survivors feel ashamed to use it?
To answer that, consider what happens when a survivor freely and openly identifies themselves as a victim. Without shame. Without qualification. Without shrinking.
They are implicitly pointing at someone. They are saying something was done to me, by someone, and that someone is responsible.
“Survivor” is a word the abuser can tolerate. Survivor implies you endured something. “Victim” implies someone did something to you. It is bluntly condemning of the abuser by implication. And that distinction is the threat.
And there is a very specific type of person who feels that implication personally — and is threatened by it.
The abuser.
A survivor who comfortably claims that word is a survivor who is speaking. And a survivor who is speaking is a direct threat to the abuser’s most critical defense — obscurity. The narcissist’s entire operational model depends on the abuse remaining unnamed, unacknowledged, and socially invisible. A survivor who speaks openly and without shame begins to dismantle that invisibility.
This threat doesn’t require conscious calculation to activate a response. It is instinctive. Self-protective. And the most effective way to neutralize a survivor’s voice without directly silencing them — without leaving fingerprints — is to make them feel ashamed of using it.
So the word gets pushed. Not through coordination. But independently, consistently, and in the same direction — by enough individuals operating from the same underlying psychological threat response that the cumulative effect becomes indistinguishable from a coordinated campaign.
But how is that possible without us recognizing it?
This is not casual manipulation. This is cult level psychological engineering.
The single most critical objective for the covert narcissist when implanting a perceptual reframe is that their true intent must never be seen. Everything else is secondary to that.
And to keep that intent hidden they will reach for the most effective psychological diversions they possibly can. And most often that is done by applying the most morally unthinkable acts available to them — because ironically, the more unthinkable the betrayal, the more effective it is as camouflage. The people they are manipulating are good people, honest people, compassionate people; typically the least capable of imagining that level of moral violation being deliberately committed against them. That inability to conceive of it is exactly what the narcissists are counting on.
This is a perfect real-world specimen.
What this post does is precise and surgical:
The pejoration is smuggled in as a given. “Satan loves victims because victims stay stuck” — the shame association is stated as established fact, not argued for. It doesn’t ask the reader to accept it. It presents it as the starting point and immediately moves on. The reader’s critical thinking never gets a chance to examine the premise because the next line is already pulling their attention forward.
The religious framing is the distraction vehicle. It gives the reader an emotionally engaging destination — Christ, forgiveness, victory — so they arrive at the end of the post feeling spiritually uplifted, completely unaware that they just had a pejorative definition of “victim” installed in their subconscious as an unexamined truth.
And the closing line — “God calls you victorious” — is the seal. It pairs “victim” with stagnation and defeat, and pairs its opposite with God’s favor. The emotional architecture does the rest.
This is covert narcissistic manipulation operating through a socially acceptable carrier signal — spiritual empowerment — to launder an actual psyop past the reader’s awareness.
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