Claiming the intellectual and moral right to question, critique, and refuse—even within intimate family bonds.
Sor Juana wrote a famous response to a bishop's criticism, defending her right to think independently. She didn't attack the Church; she asserted her right to reason. This model applies powerfully to parental identity: you retain the right to dissent from family expectations, cultural scripts, and even your own child's demands—thoughtfully and without malice. Healthy parenting isn't unconditional surrender; it's bounded commitment. You can love your child and refuse their request. You can honor your role and disagree with family ideology. You can be fully present and still maintain intellectual independence. Sor Juana's tradition rejects the false choice between obedience and abandonment. She shows that reasoned dissent, grounded in principle and communicated with clarity, is compatible with loyalty. Parents who claim this right—to think critically, to say no, to evolve their values—model intellectual integrity and protect themselves from the resentment that builds when identity is completely surrendered.
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.