Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Refusing Single-Story Identity

Maintaining complexity and multiplicity of identity so that chronic illness becomes one facet rather than the totalizing narrative of who you are.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana was simultaneously nun, scholar, poet, mystic, political thinker, and more—she resisted reduction to any single category. Chronic illness presents constant pressure toward single-story identity: "the patient," "the disabled person," "the sick one." This concept, rooted in Sor Juana's multifaceted self-presentation, insists on maintaining your full humanity and complexity. You are not your diagnosis. You contain intellectual interests, creative capacities, relationships, humor, ambitions, and contradictions that exist alongside illness. This framework actively resists the flattening that medical systems and social stigma impose. It requires deliberate assertion: claiming space for your non-illness identities, pursuing interests even at reduced capacity, and refusing narratives that suggest illness has consumed your entire self. Identity becomes a rich tapestry in which chronic illness is woven but not dominant.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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