The practice of writing to chosen witnesses as a way of clarifying, defending, and becoming more fully yourself.
Sor Juana's letter to Sor Filotea—her bold intellectual self-defense—shows how writing to a trusted other becomes a practice of identity creation and legitimation. For those navigating adopted identity, epistolary practices (letters, journals written to specific people, even therapeutic writing) externalize internal contradictions and make them real. When you write to someone—real or imagined—you commit to clarity. You defend your choices, name your griefs, articulate your complexity. This Sophos's tradition shows that identity is not developed in isolation but in conversation with chosen witnesses who receive your truth. Writing forces you to translate vague feelings into language, vague identity into articulated selfhood. In adoption contexts, this might mean writing letters to biological family you'll never send, or documenting your own narrative against narratives written about you. Epistolary practice is identity work: you become more fully yourself by having to speak yourself into existence for another.
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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