Understanding education, information, and intellectual work as essential to survival dignity and liberation—not luxuries for when health permits.
Sor Juana experienced education and intellectual work as survival—as the means to maintain freedom and selfhood within constraining systems. For chronically ill people, knowledge functions similarly: understanding your condition, knowing your rights, learning about systems, developing skills adapted to your capacity—these are survival resources. Information about medical options, social benefits, accessibility rights, and community resources directly affect quality of life. But more broadly, the intellectual life itself becomes a survival tool. Reading, thinking, creating, learning maintain psychological resilience and sense of purpose when physical capacities decline. Knowledge provides both practical power (understanding treatment options) and existential power (maintaining identity beyond illness). This concept resists the idea that intellectual engagement is a leisure activity postponed until better health. Instead, it's essential work, as vital as medical care. Sor Juana's entire life exemplifies how knowledge work is not decorative but fundamental to freedom and human dignity.
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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