A personal accountability practice adapted from contemplative tradition that helps individuals recognize complicity in corrupt systems and cultivate ethical resilience.
Drawing from Sor Juana's introspective spiritual discipline, this protocol invites regular self-examination: Where have I benefited from or enabled corruption? Where have I remained silent? What would integrity require of me now? This practice combats corruption's psychological dimension—the normalization that allows good people to participate in bad systems. By creating space for honest internal reckoning, individuals develop the psychological foundation for ethical action. Sor Juana's own wrestling with complicity and compromise models this vulnerability. The protocol works at multiple levels: it strengthens individual moral clarity, builds communities of people committed to examining their own role in systems, and creates networks of individuals who can support each other in choosing integrity over convenience. This personal work becomes the emotional and psychological substrate for institutional reform.
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