Using shared remembering of historical and recent trauma as a healing practice that restores identity and community bonds.
Sor Juana preserved intellectual history and contested narratives even when silenced by authorities—her work itself an act of remembering against erasure. Indigenous restorative traditions practice collective remembering as medicine: gathering to recount how a conflict arose, what led to harm, and how similar harms were addressed in the past. This isn't nostalgia but active reconstruction of community identity and values. When members collectively remember a harm in ceremony or circle, they activate shared meaning-making that predates the conflict and will outlast it. Elders' storytelling becomes clinical evidence of how the community healed before, creating a template for healing now. This practice restores the accused person's connection to community history and values, often rekindling their motivation to repair. For victims, witnessing the community remember their injury and honor their pain becomes validation that the harm was real and mattered. Collective memory literally restores the relational field that harm fractured, rebuilding the container that holds both individual and community transformation.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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