Claiming your ongoing development and transformation as a right, resisting the fixed identity that addiction demands.
Sor Juana insisted on growth, learning, and becoming throughout her life despite immense pressure to remain static and obedient. Addiction freezes identity: you become the addict, the failure, the broken person. Recovery demands the opposite—claiming your right to become something new. This isn't false positivity; it's the recognition that you are not your history and that change is your birthright. The right to become means accepting that you will change, grow, make mistakes, learn, and evolve. It means rejecting permanent shame-based labels while taking responsibility. You are not finished. Your story is not concluded. Sor Juana's intellectual life was one of constant becoming; she modeled that growth is not arrogance but fidelity to your own potential.
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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