Using precise language and careful argumentation to reframe your experience and resist the language addiction uses to maintain power.
Sor Juana was a master of language—she knew that who controls language controls meaning. In recovery, the language you use about yourself and your experience shapes what you believe and therefore how you behave. Addiction uses imprecise, shame-laden language: 'I'm an addict,' 'I'm broken,' 'I'll never change.' Recovery requires learning to name your experience with greater precision and justice: 'I used addiction to cope; I am learning other ways,' 'I am in the process of recovering my capacities,' 'I am building a different life.' This is not denial but linguistic precision. Sor Juana's example shows the power of careful argumentation and naming. By deliberately choosing language that honors both your past and your agency, you reclaim the meaning-making capacity that addiction exploited.
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