The reframing of necessary withdrawal—from demands, from judgments, from others' definitions—as a creative and restorative space, not punishment.
Sor Juana's convent life involved solitude, but she inhabited it actively. She used it for study, writing, thought, correspondence with other minds. Solitude was not imposed isolation but chosen retreat for the work of becoming. When identity collapses, you need space—away from the voices telling you who you should be, away from the performance of being okay. This concept teaches that withdrawal can be generative. You are not broken; you are incubating. You are not failing; you are gathering yourself. Create physical and temporal space to think without judgment. Step away from roles that define you as insufficient. Read, write, sit with your confusion, let it teach you. Solitude in service of self-understanding is not selfish; it is necessary. Sor Juana's productivity emerged from her protected time alone. Your crisis may require the same: solitude as sanctuary where you can become whole.
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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