Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Body as Authority and Source of Knowledge

Revalidating patients' embodied knowledge and somatic signals as legitimate diagnostic information, countering medical gaslighting that dismisses lived experience.

Dipa
Why It Matters

Dipa Ma taught that the body is not an object to be controlled but a source of direct knowing. Medical racism operates partly through dismissing patients' embodied knowledge: women's pain goes unvalidated, Black patients' symptoms are minimized, disabled patients' self-knowledge is overridden by provider assumptions. The phrase 'difficult patient' often means someone whose body's signals contradict provider expectations. Healthcare equity requires restoring patients' authority over their own embodied experience. When a patient says they're in pain, that's data. When they report treatment side effects, that's information. When they recognize patterns in their symptoms, that's knowledge. Providers trained in respecting somatic authority—not as mere 'patient satisfaction' but as clinical necessity—make better diagnoses and build therapeutic relationships based on collaboration rather than domination. Dipa Ma's teaching about the body as teacher becomes revolutionary medicine: patients reclaiming the authority to know and speak their own health.

Helpful guides
Dipa
Health & Body
Peri
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