Using intentional solitude for reflection, self-knowledge, and spiritual renewal rather than isolation or avoidance in recovery.
Sor Juana's convent life provided solitude that enabled her intellectual and spiritual development—time away from distraction to think, read, write, and know herself. In recovery, solitude serves similar restorative functions when intentionally practiced rather than imposed through isolation. Contemplative solitude—meditation, reflection, journaling, prayer, or quiet thinking—creates space to notice your thoughts and feelings, to reconnect with your values, to remember why recovery matters. This differs fundamentally from the isolation that enabled addiction or that might tempt you toward relapse. Healthy solitude is chosen, bounded, and purposeful; it feeds rather than depletes. Sor Juana modeled how solitude, combined with intellectual work and spiritual practice, generates resilience and clarity. In recovery, regular contemplative practice (even 15 minutes daily) provides refuge from overwhelm, reconnects you with your authentic self, and strengthens capacity to make values-aligned choices. This practice distinguishes between necessary solitude for self-knowing and destructive isolation. It reclaims solitude as a tool for recovery rather than as territory addiction occupied.
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.