Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Inheritance as Parental Becoming

The recognition that what you pass to your children includes your own integrated, fought-for identity—your questions, your refusals, your insistence on justice.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana, though she had no biological children, left an inheritance: the model of a woman who refused to disappear, who insisted on the right to think, who demanded justice, who held her complexity without apology. This is parental legacy. Parents often fear that asserting their own identity will harm their children, but the opposite is true. When you preserve your intellectual life, maintain your voice, insist on fair treatment, and model the integration of multiple selves, you give your children something invaluable: proof that full humanity is compatible with love, that integrity matters, that becoming yourself does not require ceasing to be for others. This concept reframes parental identity work as inheritance work. What you give your children includes not just care and sacrifice but the example of a person who remains alive, questioning, growing, and whole. The parent who fights to maintain identity gives a child the permission to do the same. Sor Juana's life, preserved and transmitted, becomes inheritance for anyone who reads it. Your own integrated, defended selfhood is the inheritance you leave.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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