Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Practice of Necessary Refusal

Learning to say no to demands, expectations, and roles that drain finite energy, as an essential part of protecting identity and health.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana refused easy compliance—she questioned authority, she defended her choices, she resisted pressure to become what others wanted. Chronic illness makes refusal a matter of survival. You cannot do everything. You will disappoint people. You will not meet expectations. Rather than experiencing this as failure, this concept frames refusal as wisdom and justice. You refuse work that exacerbates your condition. You refuse relationships that demand more than you can give. You refuse internalized shame about not being productive enough. You refuse to apologize for having limits. Necessary refusal is not selfish; it is the boundary-setting required to preserve your capacity for what truly matters. It requires courage because you will face pressure, guilt, and social consequences. But practicing refusal teaches you that your own sustainability matters, that your needs are legitimate, and that some no's protect your right to continue. Sor Juana's refusals, though costly, preserved her integrity. Your refusals protect the same. Over time, this practice can reframe your identity from martyr or pleaser to someone with clear values and healthy boundaries.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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