Cultivating capacity to observe and document your own experience—writing, thinking, or recording as witness to the reality of your illness and identity.
Sor Juana wrote relentlessly—poetry, philosophy, letters, theological argument. Writing was how she witnessed her own thought and asserted its validity. For the chronically ill, similar witnessing practice—whether through journals, letters, art, or conversation—serves crucial functions: it externalizes internal experience, creates evidence that your life is real and significant, honors the complexity of what you endure, and resists the tendency of dominant narratives to erase or minimize chronic experience. Witnessing your own life means taking seriously what happens to you, documenting it, reflecting on it, allowing it to matter. This is not narcissism but necessary epistemic practice: chronic illness is often invisible and invalidated; by witnessing and recording it, you assert its reality. You become both subject and observer of your own narrative, refusing to let others define or diminish your experience. The practice of witnessing is also a practice of self-respect: it says your life, your struggle, your thought, your presence deserves attention and documentation. It creates a record that you were here, that you thought and felt and endured.
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.