Claiming the right to define your own spiritual or philosophical framework for recovery rather than accepting imposed doctrines or programs.
Sor Juana maintained spiritual conviction and mystical faith while asserting intellectual independence from institutional religious authority—she refused to be merely obedient. For those in recovery, spiritual autonomy means claiming the right to your own beliefs, practices, and meaning-making without coercion. Traditional recovery programs often impose specific spiritual frameworks; this concept asserts your right to craft recovery spirituality aligned with your genuine beliefs—whether that involves religious tradition, secular philosophy, nature, art, or other sources of transcendence. Spiritual autonomy in recovery means the practices that ground you ethically and existentially must be freely chosen, not imposed. This honors the profound spiritual need many experience in recovery while protecting against the substitution of one form of control (addiction) for another (religious or programmatic coercion). By claiming spiritual autonomy, the recovering person constructs a recovery path that nourishes their deepest self rather than merely conforming to external expectations, creating sustainable meaning and purpose.
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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