Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Question as Spiritual Practice

Using philosophical questioning as spiritual and psychological practice that opens pathways beyond addictive certainties and closed systems.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's work is saturated with questions, doubts, and intellectual inquiry—not as weakness but as spiritual rigor. She questioned authority, doctrine, gender roles, and her own assumptions. Addiction thrives in closed systems: 'I need this,' 'Nothing else works,' 'I cannot change.' Recovery opens through questions: What am I actually afraid of? What need is this serving? Who do I want to become? What am I capable of? Contemplative questioning—distinct from anxious rumination—becomes spiritual practice. Like Sor Juana used questions to expand possibility within constraining institutions, recovered individuals use questions to expand beyond addiction's narrow certainties. Twelve-step programs implicitly employ this through inquiry into character defects and higher power. This concept suggests that maintaining a questioning stance—toward yourself, your triggers, your values, possibility itself—prevents the rigid, certain thinking that enables relapse. Questions keep you alive, awake, growing. The practice of genuine inquiry honors Sor Juana's model of intellectual honesty and translates into recovery psychology.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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