Unquestioning compliance with unjust systems creates negative karma for both the oppressed and the oppressor, perpetuating cycles of harm.
Sor Juana ultimately gave in to institutional pressure, renouncing her books and intellectual pursuits before her death. This tragic arc illuminates a painful Buddhist truth: obedience to injustice, even when chosen under duress, carries karmic weight. The person who surrenders their truth does not escape suffering; instead, they internalize it. Meanwhile, those who demand such surrender accumulate the karma of oppression. This concept does not blame victims—Sor Juana faced impossible choices—but rather reveals the system's cruelty. When institutions demand that people deny their nature, gifts, and truth, they create karmic chains binding everyone involved. The Church's victory over Sor Juana's pen was not a spiritual triumph but a karmic loss for all. Understanding this helps us see why working toward systems that allow people to live truthfully is not idealistic but karmic necessity—breaking cycles rather than perpetuating them.
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