Sensation-Seeking Stigma: Breaking Down Barriers to Help

The stigma surrounding Sensation-Seeking — where it comes from, how it harms, and how to overcome it.

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

Two Types of Sensation-Seeking Stigma

Social stigma: Negative attitudes and discrimination from others toward people with sensation-seeking

Self-stigma: Internalized shame and negative self-perception due to experiencing sensation-seeking

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

Where Sensation-Seeking Stigma Comes From

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

Overcoming Sensation-Seeking 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 Sensation-Seeking

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

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