It's all in the approach. As a person that battled through my personal struggle with mental illness. I had to convince myself that playing a victim was what caused it. Second, when you learn that is the case, I had to struggle in coming to terms with not resorting to playing a victim (retort it) and not to use it only as some form of a defense mechanism. Once you become subconsciously aware of it, that changes the perception you have and in turn how you project yourself onto the world. It is in this manner, I now realize I have no control in how others see me. I observe my behavior and govern my freedom in a manner of thinking about how I unlearned from the habits I ultimately made work against me. The enemy comes from within, first. To be subconsciously aware of your psychological state instantaneously. It is a an effectual biographical look at myself, as I express it here to you now.
Conclusion
My psychiatrist did not want to listen to me playing the victim of a society that I rebelled against. He wanted me to see (me) and not adjust to society. But to see myself in society on terms that are worthy of who I am objectively. I think I have. Not because I am affected by society. But because I know what I want from this place of a psychological nature. All without being a victim that society makes us, unless you invert it - then examine, unlearning what the model is trying to turn you into. You displace the victim and acknowledge that you rather be a victim. It's a trajectory that's changed me, my life, and is prevalent in what I do.
- Marco


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