Claiming the fundamental right and responsibility to understand your own psychological roots, triggers, and patterns as essential to breaking free from addiction.
Sor Juana insisted on her right to pursue knowledge in a society that restricted women's access to learning. Analogously, recovery demands claiming your right to deep self-knowledge despite shame, denial, or external pressure to stay unconscious. Addiction thrives in darkness and fragmentation; recovery requires illumination. This concept affirms that understanding your trauma history, family patterns, emotional vulnerabilities, and the specific mechanisms of your addiction is not selfish or excessive—it is foundational. You have the right to ask hard questions: Why did I turn to this substance? What void was I filling? What parts of my identity did addiction protect, and what did it steal? Like Sor Juana's defense of women's intellectual rights, claiming the right to know yourself challenges systems that profit from your confusion. This self-knowledge becomes your most valuable asset in sustained recovery.
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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