Personality Change Stigma: Breaking Down Barriers to Help

The stigma surrounding Personality Change — where it comes from, how it harms, and how to overcome it.

Stigma surrounding personality change prevents millions of people from seeking help. Understanding, challenging, and dismantling this stigma is essential for public mental health.

Two Types of Personality Change Stigma

Social stigma: Negative attitudes and discrimination from others toward people with personality change

Self-stigma: Internalized shame and negative self-perception due to experiencing personality change

Both forms cause harm — self-stigma often delays help-seeking more than social stigma.

Where Personality Change Stigma Comes From

  • Historical misunderstanding of mental health conditions as moral failures
  • Media portrayals that misrepresent personality change
  • Cultural and community norms that discourage emotional acknowledgment
  • Fear: people distance themselves from personality change to manage their own fears about vulnerability

Overcoming Personality Change Stigma

Contact theory shows that personal stories reduce stigma. Sharing your own experience — when safe to do so — is one of the most powerful anti-stigma actions available.

Don't Let Stigma Stop You Getting Help for Personality Change

The cost of avoiding help due to stigma is far greater than any social cost of seeking it. Most people who seek support for personality change report that the decision was one of the best they made.

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