Recognizing the grief of chronic illness as legitimate intellectual and emotional labor requiring sustained attention, not something to overcome quickly or privately.
Chronic illness involves profound losses: of health, capacity, imagined futures, bodily autonomy, social role. This grief is substantial and deserves recognition as serious work. Sor Juana's tradition honors thinking through difficulty—her Response defends the intellectual life against attack, her poems wrestle with longing and loss. Grief in chronic illness is not a pathology to treat but real mourning requiring intellectual engagement. What exactly are you grieving? What did you imagine for yourself that is now impossible? What capacities did you take for granted? How does this reshape your identity and future? Engaging these questions seriously—through writing, conversation, reflection—is grief work. It is not self-indulgent but necessary. Society often pressures the chronically ill to move past grief quickly, to be positive, to accept and adapt. Yet Sor Juana's example permits dwelling in difficulty, articulating loss fully, and letting grief inform understanding. This work deepens self-knowledge and honors what you have lost while building a more realistic and resilient identity.
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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