Your physical responses—hunger, tiredness, desire, pain—are forms of knowledge and authority about your own existence.
Sor Juana's intellectual authority came partly from her willingness to speak her own truth despite institutional pressure to silence her. Your body also speaks truth—but often you've learned to override or dismiss it. When you ignore hunger to meet productivity demands, suppress grief to appear stable, or deny pleasure to seem acceptable, you're treating your body's signals as lies rather than wisdom. This concept inverts that hierarchy: your body's communications—fatigue, hunger, longing, discomfort—are legitimate knowledge about your needs and limits. They are not weakness or rebellion but truth-telling. For body-as-identity, learning to listen means developing what might be called embodied literacy—the skill of translating physical signals into self-knowledge. Your body is not deceiving you; systems of control required you to deceive yourself about what your body knows.
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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