Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Paradox of Losing to Gain

The recognition that parental identity loss—whether chosen or imposed—can catalyze unexpected growth, freedom, and access to previously unavailable forms of self and contribution.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's entrance into the convent, while a form of renunciation, was also an act of strategic loss: she surrendered conventional marriage and motherhood to gain intellectual freedom, spiritual autonomy, and the space to develop her gifts fully. This paradox applies powerfully to parental identity transitions. Losing the parental role through empty nest, estrangement, or infertility creates painful loss while simultaneously opening possibilities that parenting obligations foreclosed: time, mental space, freedom to pursue callings, to travel, to think, to rest. This is not to minimize grief, but to recognize that identity loss contains seeds of unexpected becoming. Sor Juana demonstrates that what society marks as loss—forgoing motherhood—can be reframed as strategic choice enabling greater flourishing. For those experiencing parental loss not by choice, this framework offers not consolation but realism: alongside grief lives genuine possibility. The paradox teaches that identity is not zero-sum; losing one form can enable discovering others. This concept honors both the authenticity of grief and the potential for transformation.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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