Practicing deliberate limitation of consumption as both spiritual discipline and political resistance.
Sor Juana lived simply, dedicating her resources to intellectual pursuits and serving others. She understood that excess consumption distracts from genuine goods: knowledge, justice, spiritual growth, community. This concept elevates restraint as a positive practice within ethical consumption, not merely deprivation but conscious choice aligned with deeper values. Conscientious restraint means asking before each purchase: Do I need this? Will it genuinely enhance my life or merely distract? Can I achieve the same good through other means? This practice serves multiple purposes: it reduces demand for exploitative production, it frees resources for genuine necessities and justice work, and it cultivates attention and gratitude for what we have. Sor Juana's intellectual legacy suggests that consumption's proliferation actually impoverishes us—filling our lives with objects while emptying them of meaning. Ethical consumption thus includes the countercultural practice of choosing less, of finding sufficiency, of recognizing that liberation comes through simplification rather than accumulation. This restraint is not ascetic punishment but joyful alignment with what truly matters: knowledge, relationships, justice, integrity.
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