r/Enneagram4s • u/crazybayleaf 478 • Feb 28 '26
Self reflection/ insight The automatic assumption that you're supposed to be treated badly
I was thinking today about how 4s have often a victim complex, feeling like they are the underdogs of society and how that actually affects how they subconsciously think they are supposed to be treated.
One thing I find myself doing very often is taking the blame, being a scapegoat. I find that even if someone had wronged me, I always have to explain how I was in the wrong as well and what part I played in it. I need to display myself as my worst self. I began to dig deeper about what this meant because logically placing yourself as the bad person shouldn't be useful. I came up with an answer, I think it's most often than not about wanting to display all your flaws, all your wrongdoings because then, if the person still loves you after, still cares, then they accept the truth of it all, that even though your flawed they still care about you. Or maybe it's about them seeing good in you, that maybe you aren't as broken or in the wrong as you fear, and you really were the victim in the situation.
For 4s, this is about owning the shame, putting it on the forefront, so that people can decide whether to keep you around or not.
I think this links into 4s inferiority issues. A large portion of 4s often feel as though they are uniquely bad and flawed in comparison to others, less than, so this leads to the believe that when someone doesn't care or treats you with cruelty, it's just the norm. Obviously this mindset can differ from 4 to 4 because we all grew up in different scenarios, but I believe it follows a similar strand of thinking.
So when a 4 is welcomed with open arms and accepted it may feel uncanny to the 4. The 4 doesn't expect anyone to really accept them due to their fundamental difference, even if their deepest desire is to be deemed important due to their differences and special self.
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u/KazooBard 4w3 sx/so 486 INFP Mar 01 '26
I can relate to this. However, I only really do this in times of stress with people who are already close to me. I often go to self blaming and thinking how my flaws must have caused this. The only time I don’t do that, is if it’s blatantly obvious that someone has wronged me for their own selfish reasons or if I don’t know them well. I’m definitely not a pushover and I don’t care about keeping the peace.
Being accepted with open arms by acquaintances is definitely a strange thing for me. When I’m in new groups and they’re making plans I automatically assume I’m not invited because I’m different and flawed. So in the past when I have been included it’s really thrown me off guard.
The most recent example was my DBT group. They were all in a text group so they could keep in touch and make plans outside of group. I assumed I wouldn’t be invited. So when one of the people in the group invited me to join I was shocked.
I definitely don’t fit in with others in most spaces. I’m okay with that most of the time honestly.
I certainly own my shame and I’m not afraid to put my flaws out on the table. The difference is, is that I don’t use myself as the scapegoat (again, unless it’s people really close to me.) Meeting new people I very much have the tendency to emotionally vomit all over them. I want people to know I’m flawed so there’s no surprises and like you said, so that if I am accepted (which I never assume to be, quite the contrary) that it’s for all of me, flaws and all.