Building spaces of genuine intellectual kinship with other neurodivergent minds, outside institutional validation structures.
Sor Juana's correspondence with other intellectuals—both within and outside official channels—was vital to her intellectual life and survival. She needed witnesses to her work, people who understood her mind. For neurodivergent people, finding genuine intellectual community is transformative. These are spaces where you don't have to explain yourself, where your thinking patterns are understood, where your questions are taken seriously. Online communities, local groups, friendships with other neurodivergent people, collaborative projects—these become sustaining and validating in ways that neurotypical institutions often cannot be. This concept honors the profound necessity of neurodivergent intellectual kinship. It affirms that community built on mutual recognition and shared neurodivergence is not secondary to institutional belonging; it is primary. Sor Juana's letters show how correspondence and intellectual exchange sustained her identity and authority. Similarly, neurodivergent communities are spaces of mutual epistemic authority, where different minds recognize and strengthen one another.
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