The grief of leaving a faith community and intellectual tradition that shaped your formation, even when staying becomes impossible.
Sor Juana's convent was her intellectual community, her tradition, her identity. The Catholic Church and Christian theology provided her language, frameworks, and purpose. Yet the institution's demand for her silence made continued participation a betrayal of self. This concept honors a specific pain: you can be grateful for what a tradition gave you while recognizing you must leave it. Many people departing religion experience profound loss—not just of belief but of community, ritual, shared language, and inherited identity. The tradition that formed you may have enabled your growth precisely until the moment it demanded your diminishment. This is not simple; it is genuinely tragic. You cannot extract the good formation from the harmful constraints as though they were separable. This concept validates simultaneous grief and necessity: mourning what you're leaving while affirming that departure is the right choice. It honors those who leave with respect for their tradition even as they reject its current claims on them, and those who stay engaged with their inheritance while remaining in conscious tension with it.
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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