Recognition that thinking, studying, and writing are not neutral activities but inherently political acts of claiming power and voice.
In Sor Juana's time, a woman's intellectual life was transgressive. To study, to write, to argue publicly was to claim a right that was denied to women. She understood that the personal—her education, her thought, her authority—was always political. This concept applies to identity crisis: when you collapse, you may believe your suffering is merely psychological, but it is also political. You have been told who you are allowed to be. Identity collapse often represents the system working as designed—narrowing you, silencing you, making you small. The act of intellectual assertion is resistance. Studying what interests you, writing what you think, claiming expertise in your own life—these are political. They refuse the role assigned to you. In crisis, recognize: my struggle for coherent selfhood is not selfish. It is an assertion of rights. My thinking is my power.
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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