Understanding how multiple forms of oppression (gender, class, race, sexuality) shape addiction and complicate recovery.
Sor Juana lived at the intersection of multiple constraints: as a woman denied formal education, as a woman in religious habit unable to marry, as a criolla in a colonial hierarchy, as an intellectual in a world that feared female learning. Her life demonstrates how systemic injustice operates across multiple dimensions. This framework applies directly to addiction recovery: your addiction likely did not occur in a vacuum but in a context of inequity, discrimination, limited opportunity, or historical trauma. Recovery that ignores these systemic dimensions can feel like gaslighting—being told that willpower alone will save you while structures remain oppressive. Sor Juana's legacy invites you to understand your addiction and recovery within this fuller context, to recognize which parts of your struggle result from individual choice and which from systemic injustice, and to resist framing recovery as individual redemption while leaving oppressive conditions unchanged.
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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