Using knowledge, study, and intellectual rigor as psychological and spiritual protection during transitions of faith.
Sor Juana literally built a library and spent hours in study as her refuge and resistance. When institutional pressure mounted against her intellectual work, learning became both her shield and her weapon. For those in religious transition, this concept normalizes the protective function of education: gathering knowledge, understanding history, reading theology critically, studying philosophy. A believer can deepen faith through rigorous study; a doubter can withstand pressure by grounding themselves in evidence and reasoning; a leaver can build confidence through understanding the origins and contradictions of what they're leaving. The Sor Juana tradition teaches that ignorance makes us vulnerable to manipulation and despair, while knowledge—even painful, destabilizing knowledge—offers autonomy. This is not escape but empowerment: using intellect as both shield against coercion and foundation for authentic choice.
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.