The understanding that identity emerges through relationships and dialogue, not from an isolated essence, reflecting Buddhist pratityasamutpada.
Sor Juana's identity was not a private possession but a relational achievement: she was a scholar because others recognized and engaged with her scholarship; she was a voice because others listened and responded. Her famous letter to Sor Philotea is structured as dialogue, response, and relationship. This mirrors the Buddhist principle of dependent origination (pratityasamutpada): nothing arises in isolation; all phenomena co-arise through mutual dependence. The self is not a thing but a process—a pattern of relationships, causes, and conditions. Sor Juana's intellectual life was woven from her relationships with texts, teachers, readers, critics, and her community. To understand her identity, one cannot isolate a core 'self'; one must trace the web of interdependencies. For contemporary practitioners, this concept offers a radical reframing: instead of seeking your true self within, recognize how your identity is continuously created through interaction with others and the world. This liberation from the burden of an independent self actually deepens compassion and connection, since you recognize that others' wellbeing directly constitutes yours.
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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