Susan Dunlop: Lead Believe Create
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I began this series of blogs in January because it is the tail end of the ‘silly season’ that survivors of childhood trauma often struggle to navigate. It’s a time of year when the Dreaded Drama Triangle™ roles of Victim, Persecutor and Rescuer show up around the extended family’s Christmas Tree or Dining Table! I thought that by sharing this topic it might help readers make sense of some of the unhealthy dynamics that continued in their families at this time of year.
The Drama Triangle is a model of roles we human beings default to in times of stress. It was a model developed by Dr Stephen Karpman in the 1960s (see image below).
In the work I deliver it has been re-termed the Dreaded Drama Triangle™ (DDT), with the permission of Dr Karpman, by the Center for The Empowerment Dynamic’s founder, David Emerald. David liked the idea of it being DDT™, because of the toxic nature of these roles at play.
The Empowerment Dynamic (TED*)™ triangle is a model developed by David Emerald. David is the best-selling author of The Power of TED*. In 2021, I became Australia’s first certified TED* facilitator in David’s work. I deliver training programs to organisational leaders, teams and individual coaching clients across Australasia and the Asia-Pacific.
You’ll likely have heard of the fight, flight, freeze and appease (or fawn) reaction? The DDT™ roles of Victim, Persecutor and Rescuer can be tied back to those reactions, that most often originated for us in childhood.
The DDT™ roles are not bad, they are just what they are. The part that’s not good about these roles is if we stay stuck in them as our way of communicating or operating daily. That’s an unhealthy and ultimately destructive place to come from regarding our relationship with ourselves, with those we love and whom we relate to daily.
Once you read them, you’ll likely remember hearing, feeling or witnessing them in action, possibly by you and others. We can even play one or all three of these roles by ourselves and do so in seconds. One of the roles will be our go-to default over the others.
I was intrigued when I first learned of them because they made complete sense, and it made me curious to understand more.
The good news is that for each of these roles there is a way to begin the shift towards a better way of showing up each day. I have included tips to begin the shift in the spirit of sharing realistic hope as I like to do nowadays.
What I’m sharing below will be enough for now in this week’s blog. You might reflect and observe your and others’ behaviours between reading this post and next week’s upcoming one.
When in the Victim* role, one believes they are at the mercy of life events; it is easier to blame circumstances on others. The result is a denial of personal power and creativity. The Victim avoids responsibility for their actions, feeling powerless. They focus on problems, waiting for something or someone to fix the situation (i.e. the Rescuer).
‘Why does this always happen to me?’ ‘It’s not my fault.’ ‘I don’t have a choice.’ ‘Poor me.’
*Note: In this work, when we refer to the word Victim, it is the key role in the Dreaded Drama Triangle (DDT)™. However, it is not referring to a Victim of abuse or natural disaster, etc; it is referring to the state of Victimhood one can adopt and live by.
Persecutors fear being powerless (being a Victim). They use blame and defensiveness to control others or the situation and win at all costs. They have little compassion for others, ambiguity, or uncertainty. (Important note: a Persecutor can also be a non-person, such as a health condition or a problem situation (eg. disaster).
‘You’re doing it wrong.’ ‘It won’t work.’ ‘I know what’s right and we should do it my way.’
When in the Rescuer role we want to be valued for helping others. By focusing on the pain of others, Rescuers avoid their own feelings and do not realise that their pleasing and accommodating strategies keep others disempowered by doing for them what they could do for themselves. The Rescuer wants to be loved for being the ‘hero’.
‘Let me do or pay for this for you.’ ‘I will take care of it. It’s no bother.‘ ‘Don’t worry about me, I don’t need any help.’ ‘How can I be of help?’
An exercise you can do is to identify a current drama that is playing out at work or in your life. Acknowledge it by writing it out. In your own words, describe the drama in your journal or one sheet of paper. Next, identify the personal costs to you both at work or at home. Finally, can you identify where the DDT™ Victim, Persecutor or Rescuer roles are being played out in this drama story, draw a circle around them if they’re obvious?
Do not call any person, a Victim, Persecutor or Rescuer, once you can see these roles being played out by someone you know or love. Why? It will back-fire on you big time! It hurts to be called a name, doesn’t it? These are the DDT™ roles we play, we are not a Rescuer, or a Persecutor or a Victim.
The good news is that what we are, at our core and in our hearts, are Creators and the three healthy roles that make up the Creator mindset. We need to re-connect with those roles and practice them consciously. That’s what I teach! They’re not our default like the DDT™ roles are. Our default roles have been with us for a very long while – so they’re our easy go-to in times of stress.
Change will take practice, and it’s worth it because shifting from drama to empowerment will change your life. It changed mine.
If you’d like to learn more about the TED* programs or resources available, I facilitate a range of guided conversations, webinars and workshops, either via Zoom, or in person. Please message me via the Contact Form – follow this link.
Susan
As I mentioned above, I am a certified TED*™ (*The Empowerment Dynamic)™ facilitator, and share this content here under licence, with permission of The Center for The Empowerment Dynamic © 2021. All rights are reserved.