Sor Juana's vast personal library was not luxury but necessity—tools for intellectual survival; for the chronically ill, curating resources becomes essential infrastructure for identity beyond illness.
Sor Juana accumulated an impressive library despite institutional restrictions and financial constraints, treating books as non-negotiable resources for thought, resistance, and joy. For the chronically ill person, curating a personal collection of resources—books, essays, podcasts, communities, art, documentation—becomes similarly essential. These are not frivolous comforts but infrastructure for intellectual and emotional survival. A library might include disability justice theory, medical information, creative work, philosophy that validates your experience, testimony from others who understand. It becomes the gathering place for your intellectual life, the repository of ideas that sustain your sense of self beyond the medical narrative. Building this library requires protecting resources—time, money, energy—against the demands of symptom management and medical bureaucracy. Sor Juana's model suggests that this investment in your knowledge-gathering capacity is not self-indulgent but necessary, a practice of insisting on the right to think, explore, and grow intellectually despite chronic constraint.
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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