Rest and self-care become acts of intellectual and personal resistance when society demands constant productivity from your identity.
Sor Juana's life was constrained by institutional demands to suppress her intellectual work; she carved out space for thought and writing despite pressure. In chronic illness, rest is often framed as failure or laziness by a culture that measures worth through productivity. Sor Juana's tradition reframes rest as a form of resistance: protecting your energy, mind, and body from systems that exploit them is an act of power. Rest is not surrender; it is a boundary. When you rest despite social messages that you should push harder, you assert that your wellbeing—not output—defines your value. This concept validates the dignity of doing less, of pacing, of saying no. Rest becomes a practice through which you refuse the reduction of yourself to utility and insist instead on your right to exist, think, and be, regardless of what you produce.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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