Seeking recognition and acknowledgment of adoption's reality over false promises of complete healing or belonging, following justice rather than comfort.
Sor Juana's pursuit of justice was not about achieving perfect happiness or universal acceptance; it was about being recognized as a full human with dignity, intellect, and rights. Justice meant her work was acknowledged, her arguments heard, her existence validated. For adopted people, this reframes what justice means. It is not necessarily reunion healing all wounds, not adoptive family providing complete belonging, not society removing all otherness. Justice is recognition: that adoption involves loss alongside gain, that you contain multiple identities, that your complexity is legitimate, that your questions are valid, that you deserve agency. Some adoptees find healing and wholeness; others live with permanent grief and displacement. Both are real. Justice asks society to recognize adoption's multivalence rather than imposing singular narratives of blessing or trauma. It means your legal family is real; your genetic family is also real. Your adopted identity is legitimate; your search for origins is legitimate. Sor Juana's legacy suggests that justice begins in being truly seen.
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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