Rebel: the word for someone who will not inherit an answer
A rebel is not at war for sport; it is loyalty to a truth you decided for yourself.
Answer first: when Rebel is your word, you refuse to accept a rule, a role, or a truth simply because it was handed to you. You have to test it against your own weight before you will carry it. The word comes from the Latin rebellis, one who renews the war, and that is the quiet engine in you: not war for its own sake, but the unwillingness to sign what you have not read. You are the person in the room who feels the shape of the unspoken agreement everyone else has already accepted, and feels your own body lean away from it. This is not a phase and it is not a wound. It is a form of loyalty, loyalty to what you have decided is actually so, over what is merely expected. Right now you are awake inside arrangements built to keep people comfortable and quiet, and you keep asking the question no one else will say out loud. You would rather stand exposed in something true than settle warm inside something false. The word names that refusal. It names the way you would sooner lose the room than lose the thread of what you know. Take the read and see if it is the word underneath your name.
Underneath rebel, the reading most often finds the Storm rhythm, the pattern moving under the behavior.