Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Writing as Spiritual Practice

The use of written reflection, poetry, and argument as disciplines that clarify and transform belief, doubt, and identity.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's prolific writing—poems, theological treatises, plays, letters—was both intellectual work and spiritual discipline. She used language to think, to pray, to resist, to understand. For those moving through religious identity change, writing serves multiple functions: it externalizes confusion, it creates distance that allows reflection, it provides a record of evolution that validates internal shifts. Whether through journaling, poetry, essays, or dialogue, writing gives form to formless doubt. It also creates accountability—when you write, you can no longer claim you didn't really think that. Sor Juana demonstrates that writing is not secondary to faith or doubt; it can be primary spiritual practice. The act of putting words to your changing beliefs—even contradictory ones—strengthens your agency in your own transformation. Writing becomes a way of claiming authorship over your religious identity rather than passively receiving it.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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