Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Renunciation as Self-Possession

The paradoxical practice of releasing external claims on the body as the deepest form of owning it and establishing autonomous identity.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana renounced marriage, sex, motherhood, family wealth—not out of shame but as deliberate refusal to let these claims define her. By surrendering what society told her to want, she paradoxically gained complete possession of herself. This concept challenges the modern assumption that freedom means accumulation and access. Renunciation, properly understood, is an act of radical self-possession. It means identifying what claims on your body you do not consent to, and releasing them—whether these are social expectations, inherited family patterns, cultural demands, or compulsory roles. The body as identity becomes clearer and more coherent when you renounce impositions. This is not asceticism for its own sake but strategic clarity: by saying definitively what your body is not for, you clarify what it is for. Renunciation creates space for authentic desire and choice to emerge. Your physical self-concept grows stronger through deliberate refusal of roles and claims that contradict your deeper self-definition.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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