Institutions can function as protected thresholds where identity transformation happens, before fuller departure or reintegration becomes necessary.
Sor Juana entered the convent explicitly to avoid marriage and secure intellectual freedom—not primarily for piety. The convent offered a liminal space: nominally within the Church, yet partially protected from its demands, with access to education and autonomous life unavailable elsewhere. For her, this threshold space enabled decades of intellectual development before crisis forced resolution. Today, many navigate their own liminal spaces: staying in religious communities while privately doubting, maintaining cultural participation while believing differently, or holding multiple identities simultaneously. This concept validates the liminal as sometimes necessary and generative, not simply inauthentic. It recognizes that identity transitions aren't always rapid or linear. Some people need threshold spaces to think, transform, and gradually determine their authentic path. However, Sor Juana's eventual silencing and decline also warn that liminal spaces can become traps. This framework helps people assess: is my threshold space enabling growth and eventual clarity, or has it become a prison of indefinite contradiction?
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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