Cultivating focused, sustained attention and reflection as both sanctuary from addictive impulse and source of recovered identity.
Sor Juana found refuge and power in contemplative intellectual work—in sustained focus and deep thinking. For people in recovery, contemplative practice (whether meditation, journaling, study, or prayer) becomes a sanctuary where the addictive mind loses its grip. Addiction thrives in fragmented attention, reactivity, and emotional flooding. Contemplative practice—sitting with your own thoughts, observing patterns without judgment, allowing silence—builds new neural pathways and restores your capacity to be present to yourself. Sor Juana's model shows that this refuge is not escapism but the deepest form of engagement with reality and truth. Regular contemplative practice becomes a daily act of identity recovery: you are someone capable of sustained attention, someone worth listening to, someone whose inner world has value.
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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