Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Identity Beyond Categories

Resisting singular labels ('addict,' 'sick,' 'broken') to develop a multidimensional identity that integrates but transcends addiction history.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana resisted being categorized simply as 'nun' or 'woman,' insisting on her complexity as scholar, poet, theologian, and more. Similarly, recovery identity requires moving beyond the flattening label of 'addict' or 'recovering addict' as defining essence. While acknowledging addiction's impact, this concept celebrates the multifaceted self: you are simultaneously someone with addiction history and an intellectual, caregiver, creator, learner, friend, spiritual seeker. Recovery allows these dimensions to flourish without denial of addiction's role. This framework prevents the psychological trap where recovery identity becomes as narrow and consuming as addiction was. By cultivating plural identities and roles, individuals build resilience through diversity of meaning and belonging. The recovered self is fuller, more textured, more human—not defined by one defining characteristic but recognized in complexity. This aligns with Sor Juana's insistence that human identity exceeds any imposed category, no matter how limiting the institutional pressure to conform.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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