The deliberate, ongoing practice of questioning, analyzing, and writing about your own beliefs, motives, and identity as the core method of forming self-concept.
Sor Juana wrote constantly—poetry, essays, theological arguments, personal reflections. Through writing, she examined her own mind and articulated who she was. This practice of examination is central to self-concept formation: you cannot know yourself without investigating your own thoughts, contradictions, and assumptions. Writing and reflection create a feedback loop where you develop understanding and then revisit it, deepening your self-knowledge. Sor Juana's voluminous writings served as a laboratory for identity formation—she tried out ideas, challenged herself, revised her thinking. This concept suggests that self-concept is not discovered passively but actively constructed through disciplined introspection and creative expression. Modern practices aligned with this approach include journaling, therapy, artistic work, and intellectual engagement with ideas that matter to you. The examined life, as Socrates and Sor Juana both insisted, is the foundation of authentic identity. Without this ongoing interrogation and expression, self-concept remains shallow and unreliable.
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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