Learning to hold contradictions—desire and discipline, weakness and strength, past and future—as signs of depth, not failure.
Sor Juana lived profound contradictions: nun and intellectual, obedient and rebellious, faithful and questioning, isolated and socially engaged. Rather than resolve these into false coherence, she inhabited them with integrity. Recovery often demands similar capacity: acknowledging that you harmed and deserve compassion; that you are fragile and resilient; that you grieve what addiction cost and celebrate what recovery offers. Western recovery culture sometimes demands false resolution (you are either sick or well, victim or responsible), but Sor Juana's model honors complexity. Identity reconstruction means learning to hold contradictions without collapsing into them—understanding that depth includes paradox. This capacity to sit with contradiction without addiction's numbing or recovery's denial is mature identity work.
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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