In recent years the addiction treatment field has invested enormous effort into reducing stigma. Conferences, trainings, and campaigns encourage people to change their language and rethink their attitudes toward substance use disorders.
The intention is compassionate.
But one uncomfortable truth remains:
many people are tired of being corrected.
Nobody Wants Another Anti-Stigma Lecture offers a different approach.
Drawing on years of experience in addiction treatment, Jeremy Seamon explores why stigma persists despite education campaigns-and why empathy, conversation, and human connection often change hearts more effectively than correction alone.
Through stories from clinical practice, community events, and personal experience, this book explores:
- Why stigma is often rooted in lived experiences rather than ignorance
- Why correcting language rarely changes attitudes
- How proximity and personal connection dissolve stereotypes
- The role of service and responsibility in recovery culture
- How communities can create meaningful conversations about addiction
At a time when the public conversation about addiction often feels polarized and frustrating, this book offers a hopeful alternative.
Not lectures.
Connection.