Pursuing recognition and belief in your experience as a matter of justice, not sympathy—your reality deserves acknowledgment as a rights issue.
A central injustice of chronic illness is epistemic injustice: your experience is routinely doubted, minimized, or reinterpreted by those with power (doctors, family, society). Sor Juana's intellectual tradition emphasized justice as a structural matter, not a matter of individual kindness. She fought for her right to intellectual life as a justice claim. This concept applies that framework to chronic illness: being believed and recognized in your experience is not a favor others grant but a justice they owe. You have a right to be taken seriously about your own body, your own suffering, your own capacity. This shifts the burden: instead of working harder to convince skeptics, you name the injustice of their disbelief. Sor Juana modeled how to claim rights rather than beg for accommodation. For the chronically ill, this means framing recognition not as emotional need but as justice claim—you deserve to be believed not because you're pitiful but because epistemic respect is a fundamental right.
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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