Self-study (svadhyaya) as rigorous examination of internalized oppression and recovery of African knowledge systems.
Svadhyaya, the practice of self-study and study of sacred texts, invites practitioners to examine their beliefs, conditioning, and the sources of their understanding. For Africans, this becomes decolonial inquiry: asking which values are ancestral and which are imposed, which definitions of health and success are our own and which are foreign, which stories about our capacity and worth we've unknowingly internalized from oppressors. Mental distress often reflects confusion—not knowing oneself because one has been taught to see oneself through colonizers' eyes. Svadhyaya practice involves reading African philosophy, history, and healing texts; sitting with elders; examining family patterns; journaling about identity; and developing critical consciousness. This is not therapy-as-usual but liberatory education. By recovering knowledge systems and historical truths about African brilliance, resilience, and legitimate ways of being, svadhyaya restores the epistemological ground on which healthy mental life is built.
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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