Adopting questioning, inquiry, and intellectual curiosity as fundamental parental practices that model and preserve one's own becoming.
Sor Juana's approach to knowledge was fundamentally interrogative: she asked questions, challenged authorities, and modeled intellectual humility and wonder. For parents, questions become a practice through which parental identity remains alive and dynamic. Rather than parenting from fixed answers, parents who approach their role and their children with genuine curiosity—asking questions about meaning, ethics, knowledge, and identity—enact an intellectual life alongside caregiving. This practice models for children that becoming is continuous, that questions matter more than certainty, and that parents are themselves learners. The practice of questioning prevents the parental role from becoming static or exhausting routine; it keeps the parent's mind engaged and developing. Sor Juana's tradition teaches that intellectual justice requires this questioning stance. Parents who maintain their capacity to wonder, to ask hard questions about parenting, identity, society, and self preserve the conditions for their own becoming even within the demands of caregiving. The question becomes the bridge between parental and intellectual identity.
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