The karmic consequences of denying rights to one generation ripple forward, creating patterns of injustice that future generations must unravel.
Sor Juana could not study at university, could not marry and remain a scholar, had few paths available to her genius. These were not individual misfortunes but systemic karmic patterns inherited from generations of patriarchal restriction. Buddhist teaching recognizes that karma extends across time; the actions of ancestors create conditions for descendants. Women after Sor Juana continued to face similar barriers, perpetuating the karmic cycle of suppressed intellectual potential. This concept asks us to see how denying rights—to education, voice, property, autonomy—accumulates karma across generations. Breaking these patterns requires understanding that when we work for justice now, we are not only healing present harm but interrupting karmic chains that would otherwise continue indefinitely. Sor Juana's struggle became a seed for future women's rights movements, showing how one person's resistance can begin to shift intergenerational karma. Justice becomes the work of consciously stopping inherited harm.
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