Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Autonomy as Refusal and Self-Definition

Autonomy not as independence or self-sufficiency, but as the right to refuse, to set boundaries, and to define yourself on your own terms despite dependence.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's greatest act of autonomy was her refusal: refusing to be silenced, refusing to abandon her intellectual work, ultimately refusing the church's demands to recant. For the chronically ill, autonomy becomes complex because chronic illness creates real dependence—on medical care, on others' support, sometimes on others' physical labor. Yet dependence and autonomy are not opposites. Sor Juana depended on institutional support yet maintained intellectual autonomy. You may depend on medications, caregivers, accessibility accommodations, yet retain genuine autonomy in how you interpret your experience, what you prioritize, who you trust, what you refuse. Autonomy becomes the power to say no: to refuse treatments you don't want, to set boundaries with intrusive medical or familial surveillance, to reject others' narratives about what you should do or accept. It is the right to make choices that reflect your values, even imperfect choices, even choices others disagree with. This autonomy is compatible with dependence and limitation. It resides in your sovereignty over meaning, interpretation, and refusal.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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Understand Chronic illness and identity More Clearly
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