Minority stress theory explains why people from marginalized groups experience self-sabotage at higher rates — the additional psychological burden of navigating discrimination and prejudice.
What Is Minority Stress?
Minority stress refers to the excess stress faced by stigmatized social groups. It operates through:
- Distal stressors: Actual discrimination, violence, and structural inequality
- Proximal stressors: Vigilance, concealment, and internalized stigma
- Cumulative effect: The chronic nature creates persistent biological stress responses
How Minority Stress Drives Self-Sabotage
For people from marginalized communities, self-sabotage risk reflects not just individual psychology but the rational response to genuinely hostile environments. This matters for treatment.
Culturally Responsive Self-Sabotage Treatment
Effective self-sabotage treatment for people experiencing minority stress must:
- Acknowledge systemic stressors as real, not merely perceived
- Provide affirming, culturally competent care
- Address individual and systemic dimensions simultaneously
- Connect to community and collective healing resources