Withdrawal and inward work are not escapism but necessary spaces where marginalized people regenerate, think, and build alternative visions.
Sor Juana's choice of convent life provided solitude and intellectual space in a world that offered women few places to think. Her cell was both a constraint and a sanctuary. Intersectionality sometimes romanticizes constant community and visibility, but it must also honor solitude as a political and spiritual necessity. For people navigating multiple oppressions, time alone—to rest, to process, to imagine differently—is essential infrastructure. This is not individualism but the recognition that sustainable resistance requires regeneration. In intersectional practice, this means protecting people's right to withdraw without pathologizing retreat, understanding that someone stepping back from activism or community is not abandoning the struggle but preserving themselves for continued work. Sor Juana teaches that the most powerful thought often happens in solitude, that contemplation and imagination are forms of resistance, and that the choice to be alone is sometimes the most radical act available.
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