Practicing sustained self-observation and reflection to actively document and affirm your own transformation and growth.
Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz was both participant in and witness to her own intellectual and spiritual journey, reflecting on her development through writing and correspondence. She did not simply live; she consciously observed and articulated her own becoming. In addiction, consciousness is often diminished through substance use, dissociation, or denial—the person is not witnessing their own life. Recovery requires reactivating this witnessing capacity. This concept involves deliberate practice: journaling, meditation, therapy, or artistic reflection where you become the conscious observer of your own transformation. You notice small shifts—increased clarity, restored capacity for joy, deepening relationships, completed goals. You witness yourself becoming someone different than you were. This witnessing is not narcissistic but grounding. It creates a continuous narrative of change that counters both the shame narratives of addiction and the despair that recovery is impossible. By consciously observing your own becoming, you both accelerate transformation and anchor it in lived awareness. Sor Juana's self-reflective writing demonstrates that witnessing one's own development is an intellectual and spiritual practice that intensifies meaning and solidifies change.
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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