Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Intellectual Resistance as Spiritual Practice

Framing the act of thinking, questioning, and learning as forms of spiritual resistance and existential meaning-making in the face of bodily diminishment.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana's intellectual work was inseparable from her spiritual practice. Study was prayer; thinking was a form of devotion. This concept applies that integration to chronic illness: the work of understanding one's condition, questioning medical narratives, deepening self-knowledge, and pursuing intellectual interests become spiritual practices. They are ways of honoring the self beyond the body. Chronic illness can destroy meaning-making systems—career, social role, physical capability—leaving an existential void. Intellectual and creative engagement fills that void by creating new forms of meaning. Reading, learning, writing, analyzing, creating all become sacred acts: they affirm the value of consciousness itself, independent of bodily function or social productivity. This reframes suffering not as meaningless but as the ground for deeper knowing. It transforms the chronically ill person's interior life from mere coping mechanism into genuine spiritual discipline, a way of maintaining human dignity and existential purpose when the body fails.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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