Treating identity not as fixed but as an ongoing process of questioning and understanding—essential after addiction's fragmentation.
Sor Juana approached knowledge through constant questioning, refusing dogmatic certainty in favor of rigorous inquiry. This philosophical stance is crucial for recovery identity, where the person must unlearn the fixed narratives addiction imposed: 'I am powerless,' 'I am my worst moment,' 'Recovery is impossible.' Instead, recovery invites a posture of inquiry: Who am I becoming? What are my authentic values? What patterns no longer serve me? This requires intellectual humility and curiosity rather than rigid self-judgment. By treating the self as a subject worthy of sustained investigation—through therapy, reflection, conversation—the recovering person moves from shame-based stasis into dynamic growth. Sor Juana's model shows that asking hard questions about oneself is not weakness but spiritual and intellectual maturity. Identity in recovery is never finished; it is always being carefully, courageously examined.
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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