Understanding identity reconstruction as active, ongoing intellectual and practical labor rather than a destination or predetermined outcome.
Sor Juana's identity was never settled or passive—it was continuously constructed through her choices, her writing, her arguments, her refusals. She modeled identity as work. For those recovering from addiction, this reframes a dangerous myth: that identity is fixed, that "I'm an addict" is a permanent label, that recovery is about discovering who you "really" are. Instead, identity is what you do, what you practice, what you choose repeatedly. The recovering person builds identity through small acts: showing up to a meeting despite doubt, having the difficult conversation, sitting with discomfort without using, reading that book, apologizing genuinely, helping someone else. None of these moments alone determine identity, but collectively they construct a self. This is laborious and ongoing—no graduation ceremony makes it complete. But it also means no one is trapped in addiction's identity definition. You become who you practice being.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.