Documenting and asserting your inherent rights to recovery, dignity, and self-determination, inspired by Sor Juana's written defense of women's intellectual rights.
Sor Juana's 'Response to Sor Filotea' was her articulate defense of women's right to education and intellectual pursuits—a written claim of entitlement to her own mind and development. In recovery, writing becomes an act of assertion: you can write out your rights, your boundaries, your non-negotiables. You have the right to recover. You have the right to change your mind about your future. You have the right to ask for help. You have the right to be imperfect in your recovery. You have the right to protect your peace. By writing these claims—in a letter to yourself, in a journal, in a recovery plan—you move from a passive stance to an active one. You stop waiting for permission and begin asserting what is yours. Sor Juana's example shows that documenting your truths in writing makes them real, shareable, and harder to recant. Your written assertions of your rights become tools of recovery and proof of your agency.
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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