Taking ownership of how your diaspora story is told, refusing others' interpretations and framing your own narrative.
Sor Juana's "Reply" isn't just argument—it's autobiography framed by her own hand. She tells her own story of intellectual awakening, of hunger for knowledge, of deliberate choices. She doesn't let others define her motivations or explain her away. For diaspora individuals, narrative authority is critical: your story will be told. The question is whether by you or about you. Others may frame your diaspora experience as trauma, loss, or confusion. Media and institutions often narrate diaspora as a problem to solve. Sor Juana's example insists you tell your own story—not to deny real difficulties, but to assert your interpretive power. What does your diaspora identity mean to you? What have you gained? What have you lost? What are you building? When you author your own narrative, you move from being the subject of others' stories to being the protagonist of your own. This is reclamation. Write it down, speak it aloud, claim it publicly: this is my story, this is what I've made of living between worlds, and I am the authority on its meaning.
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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