A framework for understanding forced or strategic recantations as incomplete, provisional, or contested rather than as final truth.
Late in her life, Sor Juana signed a retraction of her intellectual pursuits, likely under pressure from Church authorities. Yet her retraction reads ambivalently—some scholars read it as genuine, others as strategic compliance, and still others as deliberately obscure. Rather than resolving this, we can hold that a retraction can be simultaneously a surrender and a survival strategy, a compromise and not the final word. For those navigating religious doubt and potential departure, this concept is liberating: you need not produce a clean narrative of your transition. You may have periods of believing again, moments of doubt after seeming certainty, statements you later revise or reclaim. Your evolution—including your contradictions and reversals—is legitimate. The pressure to provide a coherent final answer about your faith can be reframed as unnecessary. Like Sor Juana's retraction, your positions may remain open-ended, revisable, and resistant to definitive closure.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.