Understanding one's inherent rights and dignity as essential empowerment in recovery, counteracting the diminishment that addiction creates.
Sor Juana advocated for women's right to education and intellectual engagement—asserting dignity and capability in the face of systems that denied both. In recovery from addiction, reclaiming knowledge of your own rights becomes empowering: the right to dignity, to make choices, to change, to be treated with respect, to have boundaries, to pursue growth. Addiction often involves the erosion of these rights—self-imposed or externally imposed. Recovery includes consciously reaffirming: "I have the right to my own body, my own mind, my own future." This is not entitlement but recognition of inherent human worth. Understanding rights—what you deserve and what you can expect from yourself and others—shifts recovery from a punishment narrative to a justice narrative. When individuals understand themselves as rights-bearing, they make different choices. They demand better from relationships, set healthier boundaries, and treat themselves with the respect that recovery requires.
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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