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Concept
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The Unfinished Work: Incompleteness as Identity

Accepting that parenthood interrupts, delays, or prevents completion of projects—and that this incompleteness is part of your identity, not a failure.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana left works unfinished, her creative output interrupted by institutional demands and health decline. She lived with incompleteness. Parenthood, by its nature, fragments time and attention: the book unwritten, the career pivot postponed, the ambition deferred. Western culture frames this as tragedy or failure—the "untapped potential" narrative. Sor Juana's life offers a different frame: incompleteness itself becomes part of the story. You are not the finished product you might have been; you are the person navigating the interruption. This concept invites parents to grieve what they won't complete while reclaiming agency: some projects truly are deferred until later, some are genuinely abandoned, and some transform into something else entirely. The key is naming this consciously rather than pretending you're simultaneously completing everything. Your parental identity includes the work you didn't finish and the person you became anyway—not in spite of that incompleteness, but in relationship to it.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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