Building community and mutual support among those who inhabit secular or atheist identity in religious-dominant contexts where such identity brings isolation or marginalization.
Sor Juana's correspondence reveals her seeking connection with other intellectuals and sympathetic minds who understood her struggle. For atheists in religious-dominant societies—whether families, nations, or institutions—secular identity often brings profound loneliness. Parents may grieve. Communities may reject. Religious holidays and rituals highlight one's outsiderness. Solidarity across secular exile recognizes this isolation and builds intentional community among non-believers. This is not merely online connection but deliberate practices: finding your people, creating rituals that replace religious ones, building support networks that sustain secular identity without shame. It means creating spaces where atheists can process the grief and anger that sometimes accompanies rejection of childhood faith. It acknowledges that secular identity in religious contexts is often an exile—chosen but still painful. Solidarity becomes the practice through which we refuse isolation and remind each other that we are not alone, not broken, not lacking. We are building secular meaning together. This concept teaches that community is not something atheists lose; it is something we must actively create.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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