Alcohol & Substance Abuse · Lesson 1 · ~5 min

What Is Substance Abuse?

A soft gradient from cool shadow to warm golden light, with a small figure standing partway along it — substance use runs along a spectrum, not an on-off switch.
A spectrum, not a switch.

Before we talk about changing anything, it helps to get clear on what the words actually mean. "Substance abuse" isn't a label for a type of person — it describes a pattern of use that has started to cause harm. That distinction matters, and this lesson is about why.

You're not alone in this
If anything here raises concerns about your own use, that's worth taking seriously — and not something you have to face by yourself. Free, confidential help is available any time; the support lines are at the bottom of every lesson.

Use is a spectrum, not a switch

People often imagine two boxes: "normal" and "addict." Reality looks nothing like that. Alcohol and drug use runs along a spectrum — a smooth line from one end to the other, with no single point where you suddenly cross over.1

No use
None at all.
Lower-risk use
Within limits, in safe situations, not causing problems.
Misuse
Too much, too often, or in a risky spot — a medication taken the wrong way, or drinking before driving. Risk is rising.
Substance use disorder
A pattern that keeps going despite causing harm to health, relationships, work, or the law.

Most people move back and forth along this line over their lives. Where you are today is not where you have to stay — in either direction.

"Substance use disorder" — a health condition you can measure

Doctors no longer split things into "abuse" versus "dependence." Today there is one diagnosis, substance use disorder (SUD), measured against a checklist of 11 criteria — things like using more than you meant to, failed attempts to cut down, cravings, and continuing despite problems.2

What makes this useful: severity is just a count of how many criteria fit.

Mild
2–3 criteria
Moderate
4–5 criteria
Severe
6 or more criteria — this is what we usually mean by addiction

Notice what this framing does. It turns a loaded, shaming word into something closer to a blood-pressure reading: a measurable health condition, on a scale, that can get better with the right steps.

Why the "moral failing" story is wrong

For most of the last century, addiction was blamed on weak character and treated with punishment. Decades of brain science have overturned that. Substance use disorder is now understood as a health condition involving real changes in the brain — which is exactly why willpower alone so often isn't enough, and why treatment works.1 We'll see how those brain changes happen in a later lesson.

The one idea to keep
Substance abuse describes a pattern of use that causes harm — placed on a spectrum and measured as a health condition. It says nothing about your worth as a person.

Support & help lines

Emergency — overdose or immediate danger
Call 911.
In crisis — thoughts of suicide
Call or text 988.
Free, confidential support — 24/7
Call 1-800-662-HELP (4357), the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration helpline. Prefer text? Text your ZIP code to 435748 (HELP4U).
Help near you — an anonymous treatment locator
findtreatment.gov

Sources

  1. "Drugs, Brains, and Behavior: The Science of Addiction" — National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), NIH.
  2. DSM-5 criteria for substance use disorders (11 criteria; mild / moderate / severe) — NCBI Bookshelf, SAMHSA/NIH.
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