Perpetrator injury
You did something that went against what you believe in. Often under pressure, often without much real choice, sometimes knowing and sometimes not. What hurts is your own act when you hold it up next to your own values.
Moral injury is the clinical name for what happens after something wrong was done to you, done by you under pressure, or done by a system you were inside and trusted. It isn’t quite PTSD, and it often gets mistaken for burnout. It’s its own thing, and it needs a different kind of work to heal.
The soldier coming home from a deployment that asked him to do things he still cannot say out loud. The nurse who watched patients die because the hospital was making decisions about beds and resources. The employee who raised the issue and got a performance review for doing so. The partner who stayed inside a relationship that kept asking her to let things slide that she knew were not right.
Different situations, same wound underneath. What a person believes is right crashed into what they did, or what was done to them, or what they stayed near in order to keep their life together. That collision leaves a real mark. It isn’t anxiety, and it isn’t trauma in the way most people use the word. It’s closer to something getting hurt in the part of you that knew what was going on.
A lot of what I do early on is help people name what they’re actually dealing with. For years, a lot of moral injury gets carried under other labels: depression, burnout, imposter syndrome, a difficult marriage, a bad employer. Those labels are often true too. They’re just rarely the whole story, and they don’t usually reach the piece that’s keeping the person stuck.
The clinical literature names three. I have been working with a fourth for long enough that I added it to the model.
You did something that went against what you believe in. Often under pressure, often without much real choice, sometimes knowing and sometimes not. What hurts is your own act when you hold it up next to your own values.
You watched something happen that went against what you believe in, and you couldn’t stop it. What hurts is the kind of helplessness that comes from seeing it clearly and still not being able to do anything.
Someone or something you trusted turned out not to be what you thought. A partner, a parent, a company, an institution, a cause. What hurts is that a trust you’d built your life around fell apart.
You stayed inside a situation that was hurting you, and staying meant quietly going along with it. It goes on for months or years, and your clarity about what’s really happening comes and goes. Some days you knew, some days you half-knew, some days you were sure it was fine. By the time you could see it for what it was, you’d already been going along for a long time, and that itself had become part of the problem.
I’ve mapped five layers of what coercive self-betrayal does to people over time. Each layer is real on its own. The thing that keeps people stuck is how the outer layer and the fourth layer hold each other in place. I call the whole model the Coercive Self-Betrayal. The mechanism inside it, I just call The Trap.
The Trap is the name for what the rage and the meta-shame do together. The rage wants you to say it was them. The meta-shame says it was you, for being there. Both are partly true, and neither is the whole story. Because they’re both partly true, neither one can win, and people end up stuck pacing between them.
The same lock shows up in other places too, not only after moral injury. It runs the same way inside coercive relationship cycles, where the rage at how you were treated and the shame at having stayed hold each other in place. It runs the same way in career mismatch, where the anger at the environment and the shame at having shaped yourself to fit it do the same dance. It runs the same way around late-recognized neurodivergence, where the anger at the world that never saw you and the shame at the version of yourself you became to be seen also lock together. Different content, same mechanism.
The work isn’t about resolving the question of who’s to blame. It’s about seeing the whole shape at once, including the conditions that made staying the sensible option at the time.
Moral injury without a uniform, without a courtroom, without one dramatic incident, often gets read as something else on first pass. Usually burnout, depression, attachment trouble, or a difficult chapter. Each of those can be real and present, and each has helped people. They just don’t always reach the specific part of you that knew what was going on, and got hurt by being there anyway.
What sometimes doesn’t get named is the piece where the situation you were inside kept expecting you to go along with things you didn’t agree with, and you stayed, for a lot of real reasons. Getting that piece named accurately is usually what lets the rest of the work start moving.
If you’ve already done real work on this and something specific still feels unreached, this may be one of the frames worth looking at alongside whatever else you’re working with. It may be part of what’s going on for you. It may not be.
The first few sessions are usually about naming what happened, in accurate language, without softening or sharpening it. The move I rely on most for this is what I call sober recognition. It asks three true things at the same time: what you actually did, the situation you did it inside, and the reason you showed up to that situation already carrying the patterns that made staying make sense.
Holding all three at once is what lets the rage layer and the shame layer stop holding each other in place. It’s also what gives the deeper layer, the one about who you thought you were, room to be looked at honestly without breaking the person open.
None of this is fast, but it’s also not endless. Most people I work with on this aren’t looking for years of therapy. They want the specific thing named accurately, so the weight starts shifting in the right direction. The work is built around that.
The long-form essay, Coercive Self-Betrayal, walks through the five layers with scenes and examples from the work. It is about a five thousand word read.
The upcoming book covers moral injury in the corporate, relational, and neurodivergent contexts. Sixteen chapters. Chapter one is available to read now.
The free five-layer self-assessment takes about twelve minutes and shows you where the weight is sitting in your own version of this.
A first conversation is free, informal, and takes about thirty minutes. Get in touch and I’ll get back to you within 3 business days.