Former Australian of the Year Grace Tame has taken to Twitter to register her disappointment at the media publication of an old photograph showing her with a bong.
"To every media outlet who sought to discredit me by publishing THAT photo," she addressed the lengthy series of posts.
"Although my humour and strength remain intact, I'd be lying if I said it didn't let me down.
"Not just as an individual, but more so as an advocate of the survivor community... "
Ms Tame went on to say she had been consistently and "completely transparent about all the demons I've battled in the aftermath of child sexual abuse, drug addiction, self-harm, anorexia and PTSD, among others".
"You just clearly haven't been listening."
The rebuke comes in response to coverage of the 2014 photo, which was taken from a now-deleted post on her Instagram account.
"Whilst we must acknowledge the harm that drugs can cause, if we want to have an OPEN and HONEST discussion about child sexual abuse in this country, we must also have an open and honest discussion about trauma and what that can look like," she wrote in the Twitter statement issued on Saturday afternoon.
"It can be ugly. It can look like drugs. Like self-harm, skipping school, getting impulsive tattoos and all kinds of other unconscious, self-destructive, maladaptive coping mechanisms.
"Whilst I do not seek to glorify, sanitise or normalise any of these things, I also do not seek to shame or judge survivors for ANY of their choices."
Both the prime minister's office and organisers of the Australian of the Year Awards have recently distanced themselves from a "threatening" call Ms Tame alleges she received demanding she avoid disparaging Scott Morrison.
The federal government has announced an investigation into the claim and called on the unnamed individual to apologise.
Ms Tame told the National Press Club earlier this month the communication had come from a senior member of a government-funded organisation on August 17.
She has been a vocal critic of the prime minister's and the government's handling of women's safety issues and stood stony-faced during a photograph with Mr Morrison and appeared reluctant to shake his hand at a morning tea for Australian of the Year finalists.
In Saturday's open letter, she noted that there were "survivors out there who are terrified of seeking help because they're afraid they'll be blamed for what has happened to them".
"They are afraid they'll be chastised for their coping strategies instead of being offered support and treated for the cause of their suffering."
Ms Tame went on to say in reference to the bong image that survivors fear authorities will zero in on substance use instead of the wider complexities of psychological manipulation, which are "much harder to prove and explain".
"Publicly shaming survivors for their past is as low as you can possibly go."