Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Justice for the Exhausted Parent

Recognizing that parental depletion is not a personal failing but a structural injustice requiring systemic change, not just individual resilience.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana lived within unjust systems—gendered restrictions on women's education, institutional control, limited autonomy. She didn't internalize these as personal failures; she named them as injustice. Many parents, especially mothers and single parents, exhaust themselves trying to "do it all" while systems remain unchanged: inadequate leave, unequal domestic labor, lack of affordable childcare, the expectation of constant availability. Sor Juana's tradition of justice-naming applies here: your exhaustion may not be a sign you're doing something wrong; it may be a sign that the system is. This concept calls parents to distinguish between personal boundaries (which you can adjust) and structural inequities (which require advocacy and change). Reframing parental struggle as a justice issue—not just a wellness problem—opens space for collective action, policy change, and solidarity rather than individual self-blame. You deserve conditions that allow you to parent without disappearing.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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