If you are not taking responsibility for your actions as an adult, then victim is the mantle you are assuming.
Mafioso? There are events where our survival is threatened, and there are events where we feel as if it is, and it's really not. This is a perfect example of a limiting belief.
A kid grows up learning how to read before kindergarten. By first grade, she is treated as a prodigy. She is skipped past second grade, and goes directly to third. A combination of a poor teacher and problems at home result in her not doing well in the third grade, and she is held back to repeat third grade, and all the kids she passed catch up with her. She adopts a two-pronged attitude - she works hard to show that she's smart, because "smart" is her identity, it's become the thing that makes her special, and to abandon that feels like losing her identity. But she doesn't trust the school system any more, because of how the whole thing went down - she feels as if they are telling her she's not really smart - they are trying to take away her identity. So all through school, she really doesn't care what her grades are, but she takes tests very seriously, she argues with teachers, she engages in academic extracurricular activities and wins statewide awards - all to prove that she's smart and show them that she won't play their game. This is not a conscious agenda - but it's very obvious to everyone but her.
She doesn't go to college - she could have, but her beliefs get in the way. So she enters the world of work and advances far, eventually owning her own business. And somewhere along the way, she realizes that the confrontive, smart-assed behavior that feels like it keeps her safe, is really holding her back. It's limiting her relationships, her effectiveness, her results. And she's been engaging in it to feel smart, but she realizes that evidence doesn't make you feel smart - your decisions about yourself do.
Now, that person was able to make that shift at any time as an adult. She didn't make it until she was 29 years old. Holding her capable of making the change while at the same time treating her with compassion was all it took for her to feel strong enough to change her mind. To treat her as a victim who couldn't operate any differently, who was incapable, would have demeaned her - but it wouldn't have supported her in changing any faster.
The ability is within us, whether we use it or not. It's kind of like the ability to make a million dollars. There are no physical attributes or psychic powers that millionaires have that we don't have. So if we don't make a million dollars, is it because we were uncapable, or is it because we didn't want to, or is it because we didn't believe we could? Or is it because there is a vast conspiracy oppressing us?
Believing in the victim thing gives us a great way to escape responsibility for having been adult witnesses. If we have the habit of beating ourselves up for "mistakes", the concept probably makes us sick to contemplate. Well, beating yourself up for "mistakes" is kinda useless and self-defeating, so don't use that behavior as a defining moment. Does a victim attitude serve us in being as effective as possible from here on out? Doesn't the concept of victimhood bring a feeling of helplessness? If you take on the concept that you can change your mind without having to have others change it for you, that you can go out and determine what to belive and when you make a mistake you can correct it - doesn't that bring a feeling of empowerment? You will be more effective in your life when you feel empowered than helpless - because you are taking on abilities you have had the entire time, but that you have not been believing in.