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Concept
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Aniruddha: The Unconfinable Self

Aniruddha—literally 'without obstacles'—points to the true self that cannot be confined by roles, expectations, or the loss of any single identity.

Mira
Why It Matters

Aniruddha means unobstructed or without impediment, and it suggests a dimension of selfhood that transcends any particular role or social position. Mirabai's deepest teaching was that her true nature—her capacity to love, to witness, to serve—could not be confined by widowhood, royalty, or propriety. Each identity she shed revealed a more essential, less obstructed self. When you grieve the loss of a particular identity (a job, a relationship, a status, a version of yourself), you are experiencing the apparent death of something real. But grief for lost identity often assumes that the self was the identity—that losing the role means losing the person. Aniruddha invites a different understanding: your essential nature is what remains when all roles fall away. The grief is real, but it need not be totalizing. Who are you beneath the identity that has been lost? What capacity, love, or awareness remains unconfinable by any external circumstance?

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