Claiming the intellectual authority to observe, analyze, and understand your own embodied experience without deferring to external experts.
Sor Juana studied theology, philosophy, mathematics, and astronomy—subjects deemed inappropriate for women. But beyond the content, she modeled a crucial principle: the right to investigate, question, and think about anything, including one's own reality. Applied to physical self-concept, this means you have the right to study your own body—to observe it, question it, interpret its signals, and develop your own understanding without automatic deference to medical, beauty, or fitness authorities. You can read your body's hunger, exhaustion, pain, desire. You can notice patterns and draw conclusions. You are not obligated to accept external interpretations of your physical experience as final truth. This is especially important for those whose bodies have been medicalized, surveilled, or pathologized. Your careful observation of your own embodied life has validity. You can develop embodied knowledge through reflection. This intellectual approach to your own physicality—treating yourself as worthy of serious study—transforms physical self-concept from passive acceptance to active, intelligent engagement.
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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