The distinction between the identity you deliberately create through choice and work versus the identity imposed by circumstance, family, or institutions.
Sor Juana distinguished sharply between who others said she should be (a conventional religious woman, obedient and silent) and who she authored herself to become (a philosopher, poet, and intellectual). The assigned self in adoption is the story told about you: "the lucky child," "the chosen one," the child who should be grateful, the child filling a need. The authored self emerges through your own choices, creative work, and intentional becoming. This concept doesn't dismiss adoption—rather, it acknowledges that adoption assigns an identity that you then have the right and responsibility to expand, challenge, or transform. Sor Juana wrote extensively; that writing was authorship of her actual self beyond the role prescribed to her. For adopted people, authorship might mean pursuing unexpected directions, claiming mixed feelings, or constructing meaning from complicated origins. The authored self says: "This is what I choose, create, and claim about who I am," while honoring but not being limited by what was assigned.
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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