NeuroLumen
Greenlighter
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2025
- Messages
- 3
Hey Bluelighters,
I wanted to share something I’ve been working on that might resonate with some of you—and could potentially help others out there who are struggling.
I recently created a set of public awareness graphics aimed at destigmatizing methamphetamine addiction and promoting compassion for people living with methamphetamine use disorder (MUD). The goal is to help shift the public conversation away from shame and toward harm reduction, science, and support.
Addiction—especially to meth—is too often treated as a moral failure instead of what it actually is: a serious, chronic health condition that deserves evidence-based treatment and human empathy. Stigma kills. It keeps people from seeking help, from being honest with loved ones or healthcare providers, and from accessing therapies that could change or even save their lives.
These graphics were created for public sharing, so feel free to download them, repost them, or use them in social media to help raise awareness. The message is simple:
People with MUD need healing, not judgment. Harm reduction is the path forward.
Let me know what you think, and if you have ideas for how to spread this message further, I’m all ears.
Much love,
Nick
Founder of NeuroLumen
“Addiction is a wound. Compassion is part of the cure.” 
I wanted to share something I’ve been working on that might resonate with some of you—and could potentially help others out there who are struggling.
I recently created a set of public awareness graphics aimed at destigmatizing methamphetamine addiction and promoting compassion for people living with methamphetamine use disorder (MUD). The goal is to help shift the public conversation away from shame and toward harm reduction, science, and support.
Addiction—especially to meth—is too often treated as a moral failure instead of what it actually is: a serious, chronic health condition that deserves evidence-based treatment and human empathy. Stigma kills. It keeps people from seeking help, from being honest with loved ones or healthcare providers, and from accessing therapies that could change or even save their lives.
These graphics were created for public sharing, so feel free to download them, repost them, or use them in social media to help raise awareness. The message is simple:
People with MUD need healing, not judgment. Harm reduction is the path forward.
Let me know what you think, and if you have ideas for how to spread this message further, I’m all ears.
Much love,
Nick
Founder of NeuroLumen
