Rejecting reductive labels—whether imposed by others or internalized—to embrace multifaceted, evolving identity in recovery.
Sor Juana resisted being defined solely as nun, poet, woman, or subject; she claimed the right to be intellectual, spiritual, political, creative—all at once, in contradiction. Addiction recovery often replaces one reductive identity (the addict) with another (the recovering person), risking a different kind of narrowness. Her model suggests a richer recovery: you are not defined by addiction, but also not reduced to recovery status. You contain complexity—wounds and strengths, past and future, individual and relational. Identity reconstruction means honoring this multifaceted nature: the intellectual who struggled with substance; the spiritual seeker with doubt; the wounded person becoming wise. Sor Juana's example teaches that authentic identity refuses singularity.
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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