• Home
  • Blog
  • The Book
  • OCPD Resources
  • About OCPD Therapy
  • Contact
  • The Podcast
  • Psychotherapy Services

914-319-5049

garytros@aol.com
Login

Login
The Healthy Compulsive Project: Help for OCPD, Workaholics, Obsessives, & Type A PersonalityThe Healthy Compulsive Project: Help for OCPD, Workaholics, Obsessives, & Type A Personality
The Healthy Compulsive Project
  • Home
  • Blog
  • The Book
  • OCPD Resources
  • About OCPD Therapy
  • Contact
  • The Podcast
  • Psychotherapy Services
critical partner

Critical Partner: Rescuer, Victim & Persecutor Roles

October 7, 2019 Posted by Gary Trosclair 2 Comments

Look closely at any conflict with a critical partner, and you’ll usually see certain roles being played out. When we’re at odds with others it’s usually because we’re identifying with one of three typically recurring characters: Rescuer, Victim, or Persecutor–all potentially found in the compulsive personality. While we might imagine ourselves in just one of these roles, we often end up taking on each of them at some point in the drama…whether we admit it or not.

Contents

  • Archetypal Potentials and Pitfalls With A Critical Partner
  • Rescuer, Victim, & Persecutor in the Compulsive Personality 
  • Healthy and Unhealthy Versions of Rescuer, Victim, and Persecutor
  • Getting Out of the Drama
      • Get to Know the Characters
      • Acknowledge The Payoff
      • Extract the Healthy Part

Archetypal Potentials and Pitfalls With A Critical Partner

In what has become known as Karpman’s Drama Triangle,  Stephen Karpman, M.D., drew from fairy tales to describe the character roles that cause relationships to go awry. Carl Jung described these as archetypal, universal roles that we can all get dragged along by when we don’t have a conscious relationship with them.

Achilles

Homer illustrated these roles almost 3000 years ago when he told the story of Achilles in The Illiad. An extraordinarily talented warrior, Achilles goes off to war as the Hero that will rescue the Greeks from being defeated by the Trojans. After years of battle, King Agamemnon takes away from Achilles a young woman that had been given to him as a war prize for his courageous efforts in the war. This leaves Achilles furious.

In reaction he adopts a Victim stance, passive-aggressively withdrawing from the war. Once beloved by all, his childish reaction destroys his relationships with his comrades.

Then, once his best friend Patroclus is killed, he becomes the Persecutor, abandons all integrity and takes vengeance on the Trojans in a revolting way. He drags Hector’s dead body behind his chariot and eventually tosses it in a garbage heap.

Similarly, our good intentions can go awry when things don’t go the way we feel they should, destroying our effforts to rescue, our sense of well-being and our relationships.

Rescuer, Victim, & Persecutor in the Compulsive Personality 

This sequence often plays out with people who have a driven personality: they are determined to fix things (Rescuer), they get resentful that no-one cooperates (Victim), and then become angry at people who get in their way (Persecutor).victim, rescuer, persecutor

People on the unhealthy end of the end of the compulsive spectrum (those with full blown Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder, OCPD) tend to see themselves as Victims of other people not playing by the rules, but they are experienced by others as Persecutors that tyrannize them with rules and control. Ironically, they had originally hoped to be Rescuers by doing things the “right” way.

Healthy and Unhealthy Versions of Rescuer, Victim, and Persecutor

These roles are often seen as pathological, but, as with any archetype, at their roots there are energies and motivations that are indispensable and potentially positive:

  • Helping others compassionately is a natural part of being human. (Rescuer)
  • When we are hurt we do need to nurse our wounds and reach out for help. (Victim)
  • Life does require us to be assertive at times and fight for ourselves and what is right. (Positive origins of the Persecutor)

But we can occupy any of these three roles in unhealthy ways when there is a critical partner involved:

  • Rescuers are not helpful to Victims when they shield them from responsibility, and they avoid their own issues by focusing on others and deriving too much of their self-esteem by identifying with that limited role of rescuer.
  • Victims may look to others to take care of them and abandon personal responsibility.
  • Persecutors may become oblivious to the suffering they cause others, and in doing so become oblivious to how insensitive they have become to themselves.

None of these characters should be taking the reins. The key is to see what role they do need to play in our lives, and not allow them to take over. We need to have a more Adult part in charge….which is not always so easy.

Getting Out of the Drama

Get to Know the Characters

First we need to become aware of when we inhabit each of these roles. Take a moment to see if you can feel each of these parts within you. Try to think of times when you were possessed by them.

  1.  When you thought you were helping your partner by telling them a better way to dress?

 

2. When you felt that your partner was not treating you fairly?

 

3. When you thought you were helping your partner by telling them a better way to dress?

 

Thanks, but you don’t need to tell me that the first and third lines are identical. That’s intentional. I’m demonstrating that what may feel to you like rescue, feels to them like persecution.

Acknowledge The Payoff

Next we need to acknowledge the payoff we get for each one. Each of them can feel gratifying in its own way. But a common motivation, especially seductive for anyone with a compulsive personality, is to feel that we are right, good, and virtuous. Even the Persecutor is motivated by a feeling that they’re doing the right thing, justifying treating other people badly with that rationalization.

Beneath this motivation we usually feel the need to compensate for some insecurity, a sense of shame, or a fear of being judged.

Extract the Healthy Part

Once we are aware of these parts of ourselves, we need to extract the healthy aspect of each of these characters:

  • To help others–when it is healthy for ourselves and the other person (Rescuer),
  • To take care of ourselves and reach out for help (Victim),
  • To stand up and fight for what is right (a positive version of the Persecutor).

Each role needs to be lived consciously, not out of habit, fear, or vengeance. This requires using a healthy Ego (the executive function, not conceit), or, in the terms of Transactional Analysis, the Adult, to find the best way to express each part.

Take a moment to see if you can feel this Adult part of you, the part that can observe the feelings of each of these characters. Then ask what each of the other three parts need to have, and ask what’s the most effective route to make it happen.

This kind of change won’t take place overnight. But becoming aware of these parts of ourselves, engaging them as parts that can have a positive role in our life are steps we can take to feel better and have better relationships.

See Part 2: How Rescuer, Victim and Persecutor Roles Lead to Difficult Relationships

See Part 3: Why Perfectionists Become Persecutors in Difficult Relationships

Subscribe at the bottom of the page and you’ll get a notification whenever I post.

Meanwhile, please feel free to share your thoughts in the comments window below.

Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LinkedinShare on PinterestShare on Reddit
2 Comments
Share
11

2 Comments

Leave your reply.
  • Johan van Zyl
    · Reply

    March 18, 2024 at 5:51 AM

    I am a partner of someone with OCPD and who is on the unhealthy end of the spectrum. I want to help and support my partner.

    • Gary Trosclair
      · Reply

      Author
      March 18, 2024 at 2:41 PM

      I’m glad to hear that you want to help & support. Have you seen this post about how to get along with an OCPD partner? https://thehealthycompulsive.com/compulsives-in-relationships/partner-with-ocpd/

Leave a Reply

Your email is safe with us.
Cancel Reply

The Healthy Compulsive book is now available in paperback in addition to hardcover and e-book format:

Healthy Compulsive Book

Healthy Compulsive Book

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

The Healthy Compulsive Podcast

Apple Podcasts

Spotify Podcasts

Google Podcasts

Audible Podcasts

Categories

  • Art & Culture
  • Everyday living
  • Introductory
  • Jung/Archetypes/Spirit
  • People/Stories
  • Psychotherapy
  • Relationships & Family
  • Science: Research & Theory
  • Uncategorized

Recent Posts

  • This is Not a Test: 3 Steps to Winning the Battle Against Insecurity April 29, 2025
  • Want to Make Life Easier? Break the Habits that Make It More Difficult Than It Needs to Be April 8, 2025
  • Four Blocks to Releasing Resentment and Offering Forgiveness March 25, 2025
  • How to Help a Partner, Friend or Relative Who Feels Suicidal March 4, 2025
  • Four Ways the Need for Control Smothers the Flames of Romantic Love February 11, 2025

Archives

If you’d like to use your time in psychotherapy more effectively, check out my book on therapy.

psychotherapy

Available at Amazon and Barnes and Noble

Contact Us

We're currently offline. Send us an email and we'll get back to you, asap.

Send Message

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

You can click here or on the book below to order The Healthy Compulsive on Amazon today!

© 2025 · Gary Trosclair, The Healthy Compulsive Project

  • Home
  • Blog
  • The Book
  • OCPD Resources
  • About OCPD Therapy
  • Contact
  • The Podcast
  • Psychotherapy Services