Sharing evidence of sustained intellectual labor and reflective practice, not just finished products, to validate the unglamorous work of thinking.
Sor Juana lived partially in enforced solitude in the convent, yet her intellectual work emerged from and justified that solitude. Digital culture often celebrates constant visibility and connection, devaluing the solitude required for deep thinking. This concept invites you to make visible the conditions and practices of your intellectual work: the reading you're doing, the questions you're wrestling with, the drafts and revisions, the false starts and clarifications. By showing the solitude of deep work—not as isolation but as necessary condition for thought—you model and validate this practice for others. Your digital identity can include evidence of sustained engagement with difficult ideas, time spent in reflection, the slowness of real learning. This isn't about performing productivity; it's about honoring the actual requirements of intellectual life. In a culture that valorizes quick responses and constant availability, simply making visible your commitment to sustained thinking becomes a political and personal statement. You're asserting that some of your digital identity necessarily exists offline, in solitude, in the slow work of becoming a thinking person. Following Sor Juana's example, this unavailable-ness becomes part of your authentic presence, not a failure of digital engagement.
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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