Using precise language, writing, and expression to externalize internal experience and reshape self-narrative in recovery.
Sor Juana was a master of language—poetry, philosophy, rhetoric—using words as tools for clarity, beauty, and truth-telling. In addiction recovery, language becomes similarly powerful: the words we use to describe our experience literally shape how we experience it. Speaking addiction in clinical terms versus shameful terms versus empowering terms creates different realities. Recovery invites developing a new language: moving from "I am an addict" to "I am recovering," from "I failed" to "I am learning," from isolation to connection through honest articulation. Writing—journals, letters, poetry—becomes a practice of externalizing pain, processing experience, and consciously authoring a new narrative. This draws directly from Sor Juana's insight that the act of articulation itself is transformative. By carefully choosing how to speak about yourself and your recovery, you actively participate in identity reconstruction.
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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