Strategic compliance with religious authority while maintaining internal intellectual independence, and its costs.
Sor Juana wrote submissive letters to her bishop and church superiors while continuing her intellectual work, carefully managing what she revealed and when. She understood the performative aspects of religious obedience—saying what authority required while thinking what she believed. This framework illuminates a painful reality for many in faith transitions: the gap between internal conviction and external expression. Believers may perform certainty they don't feel; doubters may hide questions to preserve relationships; those leaving may dissemble to protect themselves. Sor Juana's example shows both the strategic necessity and psychological toll of this performance. Her eventual silencing—when obedience demanded she stop writing—reveals performance's limits. For those in religious identity transitions, this concept validates the exhaustion of hiding, the complexity of partial honesty, and the eventual need for authentic alignment between inner conviction and outer life. It normalizes the messy middle ground of transition.
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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