Ethical consumption requires honest self-examination of how our consumption perpetuates systems we claim to oppose; this awareness is the beginning of change.
Sor Juana's intellectual honesty extended to examining her own position within unjust systems. She didn't shy from contradiction. Similarly, ethical consumption demands uncomfortable knowledge: recognizing that we benefit from exploitation, that our comfort often costs others dearly, that perfect consumption is impossible. This concept rejects the false purity of ethical consumption while insisting on progressive improvement. We can acknowledge our complicity—that our phones contain conflict minerals, our clothes involve exploitation, our food systems cause environmental damage—without paralyzing guilt. Instead, this knowledge becomes fuel for better choices. Sor Juana teaches that awareness precedes change. By honestly examining our consumption patterns, we stop pretending innocence and begin making intentional decisions aligned with our values. This framework permits growth rather than demanding perfection, realistic progress rather than impossible purity.
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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