Recognizing appetite—physical, intellectual, and spiritual—as a valid source of knowledge about what your body and self truly need and deserve.
Sor Juana wrote of hunger—for food, for knowledge, for recognition, for God. She did not dismiss appetite as base or unspiritual but understood it as a truth-telling force. Hunger reveals what is lacking, what is needed, what the body knows it deserves. In a culture that asks women especially to deny appetite, to eat less, want less, ask for less, hunger becomes radical knowledge. Epistemology is how we know; hunger is how we know what matters. This concept invites you to listen to your body's appetites without shame: What does your physical self crave? What does this reveal about what you lack or what you truly value? Your body's hunger—for nourishment, for touch, for rest, for recognition—is not a problem to overcome but a voice to honor. It is knowledge about your identity and your rights.
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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