When societies systematically prevent people from developing their talents and gifts, they accumulate karmic deficit that diminishes collective wisdom and flourishing.
Sor Juana's genius was undeniable, yet her potential was constrained by gender, by institution, by the fear of those in power. Buddhist karma recognizes that preventing someone from becoming who they are meant to be creates karmic harm not only to the individual but to the whole community. When we deny a person education, opportunity, or freedom to develop their gifts, we rob humanity of what they could contribute. This is not sentimental but a matter of karmic consequence: potential denied is wisdom lost, solutions never conceived, justice movements never led. Sor Juana could have written more, discovered more, inspired more had she been free. The karma of her denied potential ripples across centuries—all that she might have created but could not. This concept asks societies to recognize that limiting human potential based on identity is not merely discriminatory; it is karmic self-harm. True flourishing requires creating conditions where all people can develop their gifts and contribute their unique wisdom.
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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