Claim:
Once adaptive bonding forms under coercion, the system turns around and blames the captive for the very adaptations the system required.
Mechanism of Blame:
- The system removes choice.
- The captive adapts for survival.
- The adaptation is moralized as “virtue.”
- The captive is held responsible for performing that virtue.
- Any deviation is punished as failure, betrayal, or defect.
Forms of Blame:
- “Why didn’t she leave?”
- “She must have wanted it.”
- “She stayed, so it couldn’t have been that bad.”
- “Women choose bad men.”
- “She’s just codependent.”
- “She’s enabling him.”
Structural Reality:
- Leaving was dangerous or impossible.
- Compliance was required for safety.
- Loyalty was a survival posture.
- Adaptation was coerced, not chosen.
Function of Blame:
- Protects the captor’s legitimacy.
- Protects the institution’s legitimacy.
- Converts structural coercion into individual responsibility.
- Prevents systemic accountability.
- Keeps captives policing themselves and each other.
Outcome:
Blame becomes a tool of the system, ensuring that the captive’s survival strategies are reframed as personal flaws rather than evidence of coercion.
We Believe You



Apple Music
YouTube Music
Amazon Music
Spotify Music
Explore Mini-Topics

Leave a Reply