The use of writing, journaling, and self-expression as a generative parental practice that creates intimacy, transmits values, and preserves legacy.
Sor Juana's poetry, essays, and letters constituted her primary mode of relationship-building and world-shaping. Her written words became her children—vessels of thought and feeling left behind for others. This concept elevates writing and creative expression as legitimate parental practices, offering alternatives or complements to direct caregiving. Contemporary applications include journaling through parental transitions, writing letters to adult children, documenting family stories, crafting ethical wills, and creating art that embodies family values. For parents separated from their children, for those grieving infertility or childlessness, or for aging parents seeking meaning beyond active caregiving, writing offers a tangible practice of maternal generativity. Sor Juana demonstrates that words can nurture, challenge, heal, and endure. Writing becomes a way of staying present to parental identity even when circumstances shift, transforming loss into literary legacy.
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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