Drama Persecutor

The Role of the Persecutor in the Drama Triangle

(sometimes called the Villain or Critic)
The Persecutor is the role that creates pressure, blame, threat, or control to keep the drama spinning.

Its core function is to make someone or something wrong so the other roles (Victim and Rescuer) have something to react to.

•  Blames, criticizes, controls, oppresses, or attacks.
•  Core belief: “It’s all your fault. You’re wrong/bad/stupid.”
•  Uses anger, judgment, or authority to dominate.

Key psychological payoff for the person playing Persecutor:

  Feeling righteous, powerful, or morally superior

  Avoiding their own vulnerability or responsibility

  Discharging built-up fear, shame, or helplessness as anger or criticism

How the Persecutor Shows Up

1. In Relationships (external Persecutor)

  Blaming, shaming, criticizing, yelling, silent treatment, sarcasm

  “You always…”, “You never…”, “If you were competent this wouldn’t happen”

  Controlling behavior: rules, ultimatums, punishment, withholding affection

  Passive-aggressive digs or “jokes” that sting

  In groups: scapegoating one person, mob criticism, cancel culture dynamics

  Classic flip: the former Rescuer becomes Persecutor when the Victim doesn’t follow their “help” (“After everything I’ve done for you!”)

2. In Thinking (internal Persecutor / inner critic)

This is the harshest and most common place the Persecutor lives.

  Self-attack: “I’m such an idiot”, “I always screw this up”, “I’m unlovable”

  Catastrophizing: “Everything is ruined forever”

  Perfectionism that punishes any mistake

  Shame spirals: attacking your entire identity over one failure

  Pre-emptive persecution: harshly judging others before they can judge you (defensive Persecutor)

  Rumination that replays how someone wronged you, keeping you in righteous anger

The internal Persecutor often feels like “the voice of reality” or “tough love,” but it’s actually the same drama role turned inward.

3. In Dreams and Nightmares

The Persecutor archetype is one of the most frequent figures in dreams, especially anxiety or trauma-related ones.

Common dream forms:

  Chasing monster, murderer, shadowy figure, faceless attacker

  Authority figures (police, judge, angry parent, teacher) condemning or punishing you

  A cruel version of yourself mocking or attacking you

  Being trapped, judged in a courtroom, or publicly shamed

  Natural disasters or apocalyptic forces (symbolic Persecutor when we feel “the universe is against me”)

If you wake up from these dreams feeling small, ashamed, terrified, or guilty, you’ve just met your inner Persecutor in symbolic form. The dream is showing you the intensity of the internal criticism or fear of external judgment you carry while awake.

Why People Switch Into Persecutor

  Former Victims flip to Persecutor when helplessness becomes unbearable (“If I can’t get away, I’ll fight and blame”).

  Former Rescuers flip when their “help” is rejected or unappreciated (“I tried so hard and you threw it back in my face!”).

  It’s a quick way to reclaim a sense of power when feeling vulnerable.

How to Spot You’re in Persecutor Mode

  Your body feels tight, hot, righteous, or energized by anger.

  You hear absolute language: always, never, should, stupid, pathetic, etc.

  You feel temporarily stronger/better by making someone else wrong.

  Afterward you feel hollow, ashamed, or more isolated.

Moving Out of Persecutor

Without a Persecutor (real or imagined), the triangle collapses.

The antidote is shifting to the Challenger role (from David Emerald’s Empowerment Dynamic):

  Speak truth and set boundaries without shaming or attacking identity.

  Use curiosity instead of judgment (“What’s really going on here?”).

  Internally: turn the inner critic into an inner coach or mentor who cares but holds you accountable.

Once you see the Persecutor—at work, at home, in your head, or in your nightmares—you can’t unsee it. That awareness is the first step to stepping off the entire triangle.

Test Your Knowledge

Drama 102:
Victim

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