Holding simultaneous awareness of who you are internally versus how illness forces you to appear or be perceived externally.
Sor Juana navigated the gap between her intellectual ambition and the identity assigned to her as a woman in a patriarchal order. Chronic illness creates a similar fracture: your internal sense of self, capability, and continuity may diverge sharply from what your body can demonstrate or what others perceive. You experience yourself as continuous and unchanged while the world sees you through the lens of limitation. This double consciousness—seeing yourself from both inside and outside—is psychologically taxing but also clarifying. It can sharpen self-knowledge: you learn what is truly yours (values, thoughts, character) and what is imposed (others' assumptions, medical labels, societal narratives about disability). Rather than trying to collapse these perspectives into one coherent story, this concept validates holding both simultaneously. The practice involves witnessing yourself as both subject and object, and using that doubled vision to resist reductive definitions.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.