Seclusion

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

See also Seclusion (disambiguation).

A person, a couple, or a larger group may go to a secluded place for privacy, or because the place is quiet.

In some cases where there are legal, religious or social restrictions on two people having physical intimacy, there may even be such restrictions on just being together in a secluded place. For example, under traditional schools of sharia or Islamic law, a man and a woman who are not married and not mahram, being together in a house, a room, a bathroom, or a secluded place may be forbidden. See also yichud.

Seclusion may be used as a safety tactic in psychiatric treatment settings. Seclusion of an agitated person in a quiet room free of stimulation helps de-escalate a situation which may be dangerous to the agitated person or those around him.

Seclusion of a single person is also called solitude.

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