The practice of saying no to external definitions of your body and yes to your own embodied truth and authority.
Sor Juana refused to abandon her intellectual work even when the Church demanded her silence. In body-as-identity terms, refusal means rejecting imposed narratives about what your body should look like, do, or be. It means saying no to shame, to unwanted touch, to expectations that contradict your lived experience. Reclamation follows: actively defining your body on your own terms. This might mean reclaiming strength that was called unfeminine, appetite that was called greed, or visibility that was called vanity. Sor Juana's life demonstrates that refusal is not destruction but clarification—it clears away false definitions to make space for truth. For your physical self-concept, this means distinguishing between rules you've internalized and values you actually hold.
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