The reframing of education from degree-acquisition to lifelong intellectual practice, sustaining knowledge and growth across decades and institutional transitions.
Sor Juana's intellectual project spanned her entire life—childhood self-teaching, convent years of study, decades of writing and correspondence, late-life advocacy. She modeled education not as credential earned but as practice maintained across a lifetime. For first-generation students often pressured toward quick credential attainment to economic security, this concept expands the temporal frame. Education isn't complete at graduation; it's a practice you sustain. Sor Juana's tradition teaches that intellectual life requires discipline and intention across decades—reading, writing, thinking, engaging with ideas when institutional structures no longer require it. For first-generation professionals, this means building habits of continued learning despite workplace demands, building intellectual community beyond graduation, investing in your own growth even when no institution certifies it. The long game reframes success from individual degree to sustained practice: becoming the kind of person who thinks critically, who reads widely, who contributes ideas, across your entire lifespan. This sustains first-generation identity beyond the threshold of educational institutions.
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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