Systematic, compassionate introspection that goes beyond guilt or shame to understand the roots and patterns of addictive behavior.
Sor Juana's writing—particularly her Response to Sor Philotea—demonstrates an extraordinary capacity for self-examination: analyzing her own motivations, defending her choices, and clarifying her inner experience with precision and honesty. This is not the harsh self-judgment that fuels addiction's shame cycle, but rather the disciplined intellectual examination that builds self-knowledge and moral clarity. In recovery, rigorous self-examination becomes a daily practice: examining triggers, tracing patterns of thought and emotion, understanding the functions addiction served (comfort, control, escape, self-harm), and identifying the underlying wounds or needs. This mirrors Sor Juana's methodical analysis of her own life and work. The practice is neither self-flagellation nor self-justification, but clear seeing. Through systematic reflection—journaling, therapy, contemplation—the recovering person develops the self-awareness necessary to make conscious choices and to recognize the early signs of relapse. Self-examination becomes not a tool of shame, but an instrument of freedom and empowerment.
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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