The recognition that mixed feelings about parenthood—love and resentment, presence and absence, duty and longing—are legitimate and deserve expression rather than resolution.
Sor Juana's correspondence reveals profound ambivalence: love for her intellectual community alongside isolation, commitment to her vows alongside frustration with constraints, spiritual devotion alongside intellectual hunger. She never resolved these tensions but lived within them authentically. This concept validates that parental identity is rarely purely joyful or purely burdensome; ambivalence is the human norm. Parents experiencing guilt over mixed feelings, those grieving the loss of pre-parenthood identity, or those celebrating its end can find permission in Sor Juana's refusal to perform false certainty. Her example suggests that maturity lies not in achieving clarity but in holding contradictions consciously and ethically. This framework is especially healing for those who've internalized cultural narratives demanding unconditional maternal bliss or sacrifice, allowing them to acknowledge complexity without shame.
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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