1. The Freedom in Remembering Your Choices.
The idea that you are a victim of the world you see is a seductive illusion, one the ego clings to like a badge of honor. It’s the story we tell ourselves to feel justified in our suffering, validated in our separateness, and special in our pain. It’s the narrative that says, “Look at what was done to me. Look at how unfair life has been. You could never understand.”
But here’s the truth: you are not a victim. You never have been.
The World as a Mirror of Choice
Every situation you find yourself in, no matter how dire, chaotic, or unjust it may seem, is the result of a choice you made — consciously or unconsciously. You might resist this idea at first, thinking, “I would never choose this pain. I didn’t ask for this suffering.” But the deeper spiritual truth is this: you made the decision, then forgot you made it.
Why? Because in choosing victimhood, you give yourself a role. You place yourself in opposition to the world, to others, to circumstances. You tell a story where someone or something is the victimizer and you are the victim. And through this story, the ego carves out its identity — separate, special, and helpless.
The System of Victimhood
Look around, and you’ll see how deeply programmed victimhood is in our culture.
• The justice system: The first word they use is “victim.” The label itself implies helplessness, an identity that defines you by what happened to you.
• The stories we tell: Shows like Soft White Underbelly amplify this narrative. People share their tragic pasts, their pain, their suffering. And what do we do? We nod, we pity, we validate. We say, “Wow, poor you. Look at what you’ve been through.” But what’s really happening? We reinforce the illusion of separateness.
The ego loves this game. It thrives on comparison: I’m not like them. I’m better. Or worse. Or different. It spins a tangled web of roles — victim, victimizer, savior — all designed to keep us trapped in a cycle of judgment, blame, and separation.
The Forgotten Choice
Think about it. Even in the most mundane examples, we forget our choices:
• You show up at a party and immediately start judging it. The people, the atmosphere, the celebrities, the behavior. But who called to get on the guest list? Who bought the outfit, packed the car, and made the decision to be there?
• You criticize your circumstances, forgetting the choices that brought you to this moment.
We forget because the ego wants to maintain the illusion that life is happening to us, not through us. It’s more comfortable to blame, to judge, to feel helpless, than to take responsibility for the fact that we chose all of it.
Why You Are Not a Victim
You are not a victim because:
1. God did not create victims. To see yourself as a victim is to deny your divine power and the inherent strength of who you are.
2. Every situation is a classroom. What you experience is not punishment; it’s an opportunity for growth, for healing, for awakening.
3. Separation is the real illusion. Victimhood thrives on separation—“me” versus “them,” “my pain” versus “their actions.” But there is no separation, only oneness.
The Courage to Let Go of Victimhood
Letting go of victimhood is radical. It’s not easy because it requires you to confront the ego and its carefully constructed stories. It demands that you stop arguing for your limitations, stop defending your pain, and start asking:
• Why did I choose this experience?
• What am I learning from this?
• How can I let this situation lead me back to love?
This isn’t about dismissing your experiences or invalidating your feelings. It’s about remembering that you are not defined by what happens to you. You are defined by the choices you make in response.
Victimhood vs. Freedom
The ego will resist this truth with everything it has. It will argue, justify, blame, and cling to the story of “poor me.” But freedom lies in seeing through the illusion. Freedom is remembering that you are the dreamer of the dream, the one who made the choices and can unmake them at any time.
When you step out of victimhood, you step into power. You reclaim your role as a co-creator of your reality. You stop seeing life as something happening to you and start seeing it as something happening for you. Every moment becomes an opportunity to grow, to heal, and to awaken.
What Say You?
At 4:14 a.m., as the world sleeps, let’s wake up to this truth: you are not a victim of the world you see. You made the decision, forgot you made it, and now you have the power to make another one. Let this realization set you free.
And when the ego protests, as it always will, remind it:
• I am not helpless.
• I am not separate.
• I am not a victim.
Because in the eternal now, there is only one truth: I am love, and nothing else is real.
#thinkgod
I am sorry.
Please forgive me.
Thank you.
I love you.
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