Asserting that chronic illness does not diminish one's claim to intellectual pursuits, creative expression, and mental engagement as fundamental human rights.
Sor Juana fought her entire life for the right to study, write, and think despite institutional resistance and gendered constraints. For those living with chronic illness, this concept reclaims intellectual identity as non-negotiable: the body's limitations need not silence the mind. Chronic illness often strips away professional and social roles, yet it cannot—and should not—erase one's capacity for thought, learning, and knowledge creation. Sor Juana's insistence on her right to study despite pressures to renounce learning models a refusal to accept diminished intellectual citizenship. This framework validates that engaging with ideas, pursuing knowledge, and expressing oneself creatively remain core expressions of human dignity, regardless of physical capacity. For the chronically ill, reclaiming intellectual life becomes an act of resistance against both bodily constraint and social erasure.
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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