Choosing what of your illness and struggle to reveal or conceal, exercising agency over narrative and self-presentation in a disbelieving world.
Sor Juana was strategic about what she revealed and to whom, protecting her intellectual work and autonomy through careful self-presentation. The chronically ill face constant pressure to prove, explain, or justify their condition. This concept offers a practice of strategic discretion: you are not obligated to visibility. You choose what to disclose, to whom, and when. This is not dishonesty but sovereignty. Some spaces demand full disclosure; others do not warrant it. Some people have earned your trust and explanation; others have not. Sor Juana's approach suggests that protecting your narrative—refusing unsolicited commentary, declining to educate, choosing silence—is a form of resistance and self-care. Not every question deserves an answer. Not every audience deserves access to your struggle. This framework restores agency in a context where illness often forces unwilling exposure.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.