Sor Juana's rhetorical skill in defending her intellectual work teaches chronically ill people to author their own narrative rather than passively receive the story illness imposes.
Sor Juana deployed sophisticated rhetoric to defend her intellectual pursuits against criticism, reframing attacks as misunderstandings and asserting her own account of her labor's legitimacy. The chronically ill person inherits a dominant narrative about illness—one of loss, tragedy, inspiration-porn, or burden—largely authored by medical institutions, family expectations, and able-bodied culture. Sor Juana's model is rhetorical reclamation: you become the author rather than passive subject of your story. This means articulating what chronic illness actually is for you, resisting imposed interpretations, naming what persists and what transforms. Rewriting the narrative doesn't mean denying hardship, but rather insisting that the full truth of your experience includes complexity: adaptation, creativity, relationships that deepen, knowledge gained, values clarified. This active authorship is an act of justice—a refusal to let others' limited understandings define your identity.
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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