Using writing, documentation, and creative expression to maintain continuity of identity through the transitions of parenthood.
Sor Juana's voluminous writings—poems, letters, theological arguments, plays—created an archive of her becoming across decades. For parents experiencing the discontinuity of losing pre-parental identity, creative documentation offers a bridge. Writing about the transition into parenthood, maintaining a journal, composing letters to oneself, or creating art that processes the identity shift helps preserve the person one was while honoring the person one is becoming. This practice prevents the false choice between "old self" and "parent self"—instead weaving them into a continuous narrative. Sor Juana's legacy shows that intellectual work doesn't disappear when circumstances change; it transforms and accumulates. Parents who document their thoughts, feelings, and growth create an archive proving they remain themselves—evolving, expanding, but continuous. This counters the cultural myth that parenthood erases prior identity.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.