Treating what you've been given—culture, knowledge, family patterns, even pain—as material to work with consciously rather than as predetermined fate.
Sor Juana inherited Spanish Catholic intellectual tradition, Mexican colonial position, female gender constraints, and illegitimate birth status. She didn't deny these inheritances nor let them determine her path entirely. She treated them as resources: drawing on theological tradition to construct arguments, using her position to gain access, transforming constraint into creative pressure. Adopted identities often involve complex inheritances: genetic predispositions, cultural backgrounds you didn't choose, family histories, even trauma. The practice here is reframing inheritance from destiny to resource. What wisdom, strength, beauty, or knowledge did your inheritance contain? What patterns do you need to transform? What can you build with the material you received? This doesn't mean pretending harm didn't happen or rejecting your origin; it means taking active agency with what you've been given. Sor Juana's intellectual method—engaging tradition critically, building on inherited knowledge while questioning it—models how to inherit wisely.
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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