A framework recognizing that chronic illness illuminates the always-already interdependent nature of human existence, challenging myths of independence.
Sor Juana lived within rigid hierarchies and dependencies—on her convent, her patroness, her institutional church—yet maintained her intellectual autonomy within those constraints. Chronic illness strips away the illusion of complete independence that healthy society cultivates. The chronically ill person necessarily depends on medications, medical providers, care partners, accessibility accommodations, and adapted systems. Rather than shame this as failure, interdependence philosophy frames it as honest recognition of the human condition. All humans depend on others—for birth, education, infrastructure, emotional sustenance. Illness simply makes visible what is always true. This reframes the chronically ill person not as uniquely burdened but as epistemologically advanced: you see clearly what others obscure. Interdependence becomes strength, not weakness—a basis for solidarity, mutual aid, and realistic community. It challenges the isolating mythology of the self-made individual and asserts that vulnerability and connection are fundamental to being human.
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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