Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Writing Your Own Story—Reauthoring Identity

Using writing and self-expression to actively reconstruct your life narrative, moving from addiction's script to your authentic authorship.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana was a prolific writer—poetry, theology, drama—using the written word to assert her identity and intellectual authority. For those in addiction recovery, writing becomes a transformative tool for identity reconstruction. Addiction creates a false narrative: you are your addiction, your shame defines you, your worst moments represent your truth. Recovery requires authoring a new story where addiction is a chapter, not the whole book. This concept involves therapeutic writing practices: journaling about who you were before addiction, envisioning who you want to become, writing letters to your younger self, documenting recovery milestones, articulating your values and non-negotiables. Through writing, you externalize the confused internal narrative, see patterns, claim agency, and gradually construct coherence. Like Sor Juana's written works preserved her voice across centuries, your written recovery story becomes a record of your intellectual and spiritual journey. This practice combats the characteristic silence and shame of addiction, replacing secrecy with articulation, fragmentation with narrative arc, victimhood with authorship.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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