A foundational assertion that your thoughts, learning, and intellectual autonomy are rights, not luxuries—central to restoring identity.
Sor Juana fought fiercely against authority that would deny her the right to think, learn, and express ideas. Addiction similarly colonizes the mind, treating your consciousness as property of the compulsion. Recovery begins with a radical assertion: your mind belongs to you. Your capacity to learn, wonder, question, and create is a fundamental right, not something to be earned after "proving" sobriety. This Sophosian principle invites you to reclaim intellectual authority immediately—pursue a question that intrigues you, engage with ideas that challenge you, defend your own thinking against internalized voices that diminish it. In asserting cognitive autonomy, you actively dismantle addiction's claim on your identity and rebuild selfhood on the ground of your own reasoning.
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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