Rejecting confinement to reproductive roles or familial obligation, asserting the right to intellectual, social, and economic participation.
Sor Juana entered the convent partly to escape marriage and compulsory motherhood, choosing intellectual solitude over domestic servitude. She publicly defended women's right to remain unmarried and pursue learning—a radical refusal of her era's prescribed feminine role. Hijra and kothi individuals, often rejected or expelled from heteronormative family structures, similarly refuse domesticity as typically defined: bearing sons, serving husbands, conforming to caste-and-gender complementarity. Instead, many hijra build chosen families (guru-chela networks, communities), develop independent livelihoods (performance, sex work, begging, blessing), and claim social roles (midwife, ritual specialist, entertainment) rooted in their gender identity. This concept frames such refusal not as failure or loss but as conscious rejection of oppressive structures and creative assertion of alternative ways of living, belonging, and contributing to society.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.