A conscious practice of limiting consumption to align with genuine needs and values rather than manufactured desires.
Sor Juana lived a constrained life by choice and circumstance, using limitation as a framework for intellectual freedom and integrity. Ethical consumption includes recognizing that our capacity to consume is often disconnected from our actual needs—that markets deliberately cultivate desire to drive purchasing. Intentional restraint means distinguishing between genuine needs and manufactured wants, then exercising discipline to consume only what we truly require or deeply value. This isn't asceticism but clarity: understanding the psychological and marketing mechanisms that drive unnecessary purchasing, then choosing differently. Restraint creates space—financial, psychological, and ecological—for meaningful choices. It also reduces the total demand that incentivizes exploitative production. When we buy less, the pressure for fast fashion and planned obsolescence diminishes. This concept reframes restraint not as deprivation but as liberation: freedom from the exhausting treadmill of constant consumption. Sor Juana found intellectual and spiritual freedom in her constraints; similarly, ethical consumers find agency and alignment in thoughtful limitation.
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