Engaging in creative work—art, music, writing, craft—as active reconstruction of identity and restoration of joy.
Sor Juana's prolific creativity was not luxury but necessity—the medium through which she knew and expressed herself. Addiction often deadens creativity; recovery requires reanimating it. Whether through writing, visual art, music, movement, or craft, creative engagement rebuilds neural pathways, reconnects to pleasure beyond intoxication, and generates new identity. Creativity isn't therapy performed; it's the act of making something that didn't exist, which directly counters addiction's narrative of depletion and powerlessness. Sor Juana's example—the sheer volume and ambition of her creative output—suggests that recovery identity strengthens through generative practice: making, building, creating tangible expressions of the self being reconstructed.
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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