Understanding addiction's systems, triggers, and psychological roots as an act of personal and social justice.
Sor Juana believed knowledge was inseparable from justice—understanding truth was essential to living rightly. In addiction recovery, this means systematically learning about addiction itself: its neurological basis, its social determinants, and its historical context. This knowledge-seeking becomes an act of justice toward yourself and others. By understanding how addiction operates—the role of trauma, genetics, environment, and marketing—you cease to internalize shame and begin to see structural factors. This shifts recovery from self-blame to informed self-compassion. The practice includes studying your own addiction patterns, learning from peer experiences, and understanding how systemic issues may have contributed. This intellectual justice work empowers you to hold yourself accountable without destructive self-condemnation, and to recognize patterns worth changing.
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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