Recognizing that which language you speak shapes what you can think and who you become, and choosing languages deliberately as an act of authentic identity.
Sor Juana wrote in Spanish, the language of her education and power, but she inhabited a world of Indigenous languages and classical Latin. Language isn't neutral—it carries traditions, power structures, and ways of being. Choosing your language (literal or metaphorical) is choosing which tradition's thought patterns and values you internalize. This concept explores how authenticity requires conscious relationship with inherited languages and forms of expression. If you speak only your dominant culture's language, you access only its worldview. If you learn others' languages—linguistic, cultural, intellectual—you gain access to different ways of understanding. The practice involves asking: What languages do I speak fluently? What languages are available to me? Which ones carry the traditions I want to integrate? Authentic identity across traditions means deliberately choosing which voices and vocabularies shape your thinking, rather than unconsciously assuming one language is neutral or natural.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.