Developing skills to read labels, understand certifications, trace origins, and evaluate claims—treating consumption as a literacy practice requiring ongoing education.
Sor Juana believed that education was the foundation of freedom and justice. She modeled lifelong learning and insisted that understanding required continuous effort. Consumption literacy applies this principle to economic choices: learning to read and interpret product labels, understanding certification systems (Fair Trade, organic, B-Corp), researching company histories and practices, and developing critical skepticism toward marketing claims. This literacy isn't natural—it requires deliberate education and practice. Companies often obscure information, use misleading language, or hide behind complexity to avoid accountability. Developing consumption literacy means refusing to accept surfaces and committing to deeper investigation. Like Sor Juana's intellectual practice, it demands time and effort but produces genuine freedom. When you can interpret a supply chain, understand what certifications actually guarantee, and recognize greenwashing, you're no longer passive consumer but informed agent. This literacy practice honors Sor Juana's conviction that knowledge and freedom are inseparable, and that understanding how systems work is the first step toward changing them.
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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