The practice of deep introspection and honest self-examination as essential preparation for meaningful accountability and genuine behavioral change.
Sor Juana's intellectual method required rigorous self-examination and honest questioning of one's own assumptions and contradictions. Applied to harm and accountability, self-knowledge becomes foundational work that precedes genuine responsibility. In restorative frameworks, offenders must understand their own patterns, motivations, and blind spots before they can authentically acknowledge harm or commit to change. Punitive approaches often skip this work, imposing consequences without requiring the internal recognition necessary for transformation. Sor Juana's writings demonstrate how self-knowledge protects against self-deception and rationalization. Victims too benefit from this principle—understanding their own needs and boundaries clarifies what genuine repair looks like. This concept rejects both false confession and defensive denial, instead requiring all parties to develop honest awareness of their own role in the situation. True accountability emerges only when people know themselves well enough to recognize what must change.
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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