Smashing Stigma: Dismantling Stereotypes, Prejudice, and Discrimination
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About this ebook
Stigma is everywhere around us.
People may mistrust the unhoused or discriminate against those suffering from an addiction. They may change the way they interact with someone after witnessing a panic attack from anxiety or PTSD. Or they may judge others for their appearance and their weight.
Stigma leads to harmful stereotypes, prejudice, and discrimination. It can keep people from seeking the help and support they need. They may internalize others’ stigma and start to blame themselves for their condition or experiences. In some cases, the effects of stigma can even be life threatening.
Even with so many examples, it can be difficult to identify stigma in real time and even harder to work against it. But learning about common types of stigma can help to reduce them. Author and registered nurse Connie Goldsmith covers six stigmatized conditions—poor mental health, addiction, homelessness, relationship abuse, PTSD, and above average weight—to help you understand what stigma looks like and how it affects real people. Discover how you can dismantle stigma and work to reduce stereotypes, prejudice, and discrimination.
Connie Goldsmith
Connie Goldsmith is a registered nurse with a bachelor of science degree in nursing and a master of public administration degree in health care. She has written numerous books for YA readers and nearly two hundred magazine articles. Her recent books include Kiyo Sato: From a WWII Japanese Internment Camp to a Life of Service (2020), a Junior Library Guild selection; Running on Empty: Sleeplessness in American Teens (2021); Understanding Coronaviruses: SARS, MERS, and the COVID-19 Pandemic (2021); and Bombs Over Bikini: The World's First Nuclear Disaster (2014), a Junior Library Guild selection, a Children's Book Committee at Bank Street College Best Children's Book of the Year, an Association of Children's Librarians of Northern California Distinguished Book, and an SCBWI Crystal Kite Winner. She lives in Sacramento, California. Visit her website at http://www.conniegoldsmith.com/.
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Smashing Stigma - Connie Goldsmith
Trigger Warning
This book contains discussions of depression and suicide, self-harm, addiction and overdose, sexual assault, intimate partner violence, and war. If any of these subjects are traumatizing to you, please skip those chapters.
Text copyright © 2024 by Connie Goldsmith
All rights reserved. International copyright secured. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—without the prior written permission of Lerner Publishing Group, Inc., except for the inclusion of brief quotations in an acknowledged review.
Twenty-First Century Books™
An imprint of Lerner Publishing Group, Inc.
241 First Avenue North
Minneapolis, MN 55401 USA
For reading levels and more information, look up this title at www.lernerbooks.com.
Main body text set in Avenir LT Pro.
Typeface provided by Linotype AG.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Goldsmith, Connie, 1945–author.
Title: Smashing stigma: dismantling stereotypes, prejudice, and discrimination / Connie Goldsmith.
Description: Minneapolis: Twenty-First Century Books, [2023] | Includes bibliographical references and index. | Audience: Ages 13–18 | Audience: Grades 7–9 | Summary: Stigma is everywhere, from mistrust of unhoused people to discrimination based on weight. Discover how to identify and confront stigma and stop the spread of stereotypes, prejudice, and discrimination
— Provided by publisher.
Identifiers: LCCN 2022023691 (print) | LCCN 2022023692 (ebook) | ISBN 9781728477398 (library binding) | ISBN 9781728485959 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Stigma (Social psychology)—Juvenile literature. | Discrimination—Juvenile literature. | Prejudice—Juvenile literature.
Classification: LCC HM1131.G65 2023 (print) | LCC HM1131 (ebook) | DDC 305—dc23/eng/20220527
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2022023691
LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2022023692
Manufactured in the United States of America
1-52375-50732-2/22/2023
Table of Contents
Chapter 1
Stigma: It’s Everywhere
Chapter 2
I’m Not Crazy: Living with the Stigma of Mental Illness
Chapter 3
I’m More Than a Junkie: Living with the Stigma of Addiction
Chapter 4
Unhoused: Don’t Judge Me by Where I Live
Chapter 5
Relationship Violence: Living with Fear
Chapter 6
PTSD: Coping with the Stigma of Military-Related Trauma
Chapter 7
Don’t Fat Shame Me: My Weight Is Not Your Business
Chapter 8
Smashing the Stigma: What You Can Do
Glossary
Source Notes
Selected Bibliography
Further Information
Index
Chapter 1
Stigma: It’s Everywhere
Stigma is a mark of disgrace associated with a particular circumstance, quality, or person. It’s a false idea that can lead to negative beliefs about a person’s perceived characteristics, such as a particular behavior or condition. And it can result in harmful actions. It’s in the negative views we may hold about other people and in our disapproval of things we don’t understand. That lack of understanding can make another person seem different, untrustworthy, or unstable in some way.
Stigma is all around us. It’s so common we may not even notice it. It can cause a boy to be too afraid to tell anyone he sees a therapist for depression. He doesn’t want to face the negative comments people may say about him. Just snap out of it,
they might say. Stop feeling sorry for yourself.
Or stigma could be directed at people who used to take drugs. They’re in recovery, but other people’s incorrect belief that once an addict, always an addict
has made those with addictions feel too ashamed to talk about their experiences. Or it’s directed at a girl whose boyfriend abuses her. Stigma prevents her friends and family from understanding that she needs their help, and they may even blame her for making him angry.
And don’t stop and talk to that unhoused man—he’s probably dangerous!
Stigma can be directed at anyone. Even if you’re a highly paid guard in the National Football League (NFL). Brandon Brooks, formerly of the Philadelphia Eagles and the Houston Texans, has been open about his mental illness since 2016. At times, Brooks experiences severe anxiety. The stomach pain, nausea, and vomiting that go along with his anxiety have kept Brooks from playing several football games during his career. In 2019 he had to leave an important game against the Seattle Seahawks just before Thanksgiving.
All photographs and diagrams in this book are full-color images. A photograph of Brandon Brooks in a white-and-black Philadelphia Eagles uniform with his number 79 on the front. The perspective is close to Brooks, focusing on his face, arms, and upper torso. He is looking off to the right of the frame with a slightly open mouth. Tattoos are visible on his biceps and he is wearing his hair up. The back of another player wearing a helmet is blurred behind him and the background is a blur of multiple colors.Brandon Brooks was one of the first active players in the NFL to speak out about mental health. Many sports fans believe that Brooks’s football legacy should be as much tied to his openness about mental health as his plays on the field.
Make no mistake, I’m NOT ashamed or embarrassed by this nor what I go through daily,
Brooks said in an interview after the game. I’ve had this under control for a couple of years and had a setback yesterday. The only thing I’m upset about is that when my team needed me, I wasn’t able to be out there with and for them.
Like so many people, Brooks faces stigma because of his anxiety. People may say things like, Stomach pain is going to keep him from playing in an important football game? He’s being so dramatic! He should just push through it and play the game.
People may be most familiar with the stigma associated with mental health issues, but it also can arise for other reasons. Addiction, being unhoused, intimate partner violence, race, and even body weight carry their own stigma. Stigma and its results seriously affect the well-being of those who experience them and can change how people feel about themselves. Stigma can affect people when they are having problems, while they are in treatment, and even years later. It’s hard enough to deal with a serious issue in your life. You want to count on help from your friends and family. But that isn’t always possible. Being stigmatized for your struggles makes them even more difficult to overcome.
Stigma in Athletes
Brandon Brooks isn’t the only athlete to go public about his mental health. Top tennis pro Naomi Osaka and Olympic medalists Simone Biles and Michael Phelps have all spoken out about their mental health in recent years.
Osaka dropped out of the French Open tennis tournament in 2021. She cited her mental health as the reason, revealing on Instagram that she’d struggled with depression and anxiety for years. Osaka said, I think now the best thing for the tournament . . . and my well-being is that I withdraw so that everyone can get back to focusing on the tennis going on in Paris.
She wrote in the New York Times, It’s O.K. to not be O.K.
Biles, who won seven Olympic medals in 2016, withdrew from gymnastic competition in the Tokyo Olympics in 2021. She was experiencing the twisties,
a dangerous condition in which gymnasts lose awareness of where they are in the air during a routine. Stressed and anxious, Biles made the right decision for herself. At the end of the day, we’re human, too, so we have to protect our mind and our body rather than just go out there and do what the world wants us to do,
she said.
Phelps, who won twenty-eight Olympic medals during his swimming career, has disclosed that he struggles with depression and anxiety. I stuffed my emotions away because I couldn’t show that weakness or that vulnerability,
Phelps said. As an athlete, it’s challenging, especially for a male. We’re supposed to be big and strong and macho, not somebody who struggles with their emotions.
He applauds what Biles did. He said, [Biles] opening up and talking about mental health is a big, powerful step forward toward blowing the stigma out of the water.
When publicly renowned athletes such as Brooks, Osaka, Biles, and Phelps openly discuss their mental health challenges, it helps to reduce the stigma of mental health issues for everyone.
Simone Biles at the White House for a 2022 Presidential Medal of Freedom ceremony. The perspective is close to Biles, focusing on her face and upper torso, as she is looking off to the right of the frame. Biles wears a sparkling black blazer with a shimmery collar. Her long black hair falls in box braids past her shoulders. She is wearing a narrow gold necklace, and in her visible ear, wears a gold earring and a second smaller earring. In the background is part of the White House's East Room, with a golden curtain visible along the right edge of the photo.Simone Biles was presented the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2022 for her advocacy for athletes’ mental health and safety as well as children in foster care and victims of sexual assault.
Stigma, Stereotypes, Prejudice, and Discrimination
To reiterate, stigma is a mark of disgrace associated with a quality or behavior, or the negative beliefs that someone holds about another person who has particular traits or characteristics. Stigma produces inaccurate beliefs against people who may have certain conditions or display behaviors that others see as strange or wrong. The negative beliefs of stigma lead to stereotypes. They can lead to prejudice and then to discrimination and the denial of human rights that every person deserves.
People may stigmatize the same trait to different degrees depending on how much they know about it or what the cause of the behavior is. For example, if someone stumbles over their words because they suffered a stroke, others may not stigmatize that behavior. But if a person is stumbling over words because they have an alcohol addiction and are intoxicated, they may experience more stigma. Other people may believe that person should be able to stop drinking and that the addiction is the person’s own fault.
A vertical flow chart describing examples of stigma. The top is labeled ‘Stigma’ and leads to three branches labeled from left to right: Stereotypes (Ideas), Prejudice (Beliefs), and Discrimination (Actions). There are two triangular arrows, one pointing from ‘Stereotypes’ to ‘Prejudice’ and one pointing from ‘Prejudice’ to ‘Discrimination’. The ‘Stereotypes (Ideas)’ branch leads to the following example of stereotype stigma: ‘People with mental health challenges are incapable, fragile, dangerous, and cannot recover.’ The ‘Prejudice (Beliefs)’ branch leads to the following example of prejudice stigma: ‘They are scary, shameful, or less than those with good mental health.’ The ‘Discrimination (Actions)’ branch leads to two branches labeled ‘Social’ and ‘Structural.’ The ‘Social’ branch leads to the following example of social discrimination stigma: ‘I don’t want them to live next door, be a coworker, or marry into the family.’ The ‘Structural’ branch leads to the following example of structural discrimination stigma: ‘Employers do not hire/support recovery, schools lack effective supports for success, and health insurance doesn’t provide equal coverage.’The Wisconsin Initiative for Stigma Elimination (WISE) provides this helpful diagram of how stigma may affect a person with a mental illness. But the diagram can also apply to stigma that people experience for other reasons.
Stereotypes. Stigma puts individual people who may have similar traits into groups and makes anyone who has those traits part of a stereotype. Stereotypes are oversimplified and mistaken ideas about a group of people based on how they look or act. For example, a person may believe a stereotype that says people with mental illnesses are fragile, incapable of caring for themselves, and even dangerous. Or a stereotype can be as simple as people who wear glasses are smart
or athletes are tough.
Prejudice. This refers to preconceived and negative beliefs about groups of people who fit a stereotype, such as those with a mental illness, or those of a different