The deliberate construction of an inviolable inner space—intellectual, spiritual, emotional—that remains yours alone regardless of external circumstances or claims.
Sor Juana's famous "Response"—her defense of her intellectual life—describes an inner chamber of consciousness that belonged to her alone, that no institution or authority could fully control or access. She maintained this sanctuary even while living within the convent, under vows, under surveillance. For adopted people, the inner chamber becomes particularly crucial: adoption can feel like your story, your origins, your entire existence belongs partly to others—to adoptive parents, to birth parents, to the adoption narrative itself. Constructing and defending an inner chamber means claiming internal space that is absolutely yours. This isn't isolation; it's self-protection and integrity. Your inner experience—your questions, your doubts, your authentic feelings about adoption, your private understanding of who you are—belongs to you completely. No family story, no adoption narrative, no well-meaning perspective gets to colonize your inner life. Sor Juana teaches that this inviolability is not selfish; it's essential. Without it, you cannot develop authentic identity. The sanctuary of your own consciousness is where you become actually free, regardless of external circumstances.
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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