Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Antara-Prema: The Interior Freedom Practice

Cultivating love and freedom within the self that cannot be taken by external collapse or loss.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's freedom was interior. Though her external circumstances were constrained—locked in palaces, condemned by society—her inner life was boundless. She accessed an antara-prema, an interior love that connected her directly to the sacred. For those anticipating civilizational loss, this practice becomes foundational: developing an internal freedom that does not depend on civilization's systems remaining stable. This is not escapism but preparation. By cultivating practices that connect us to intrinsic meaning—whether through devotion, beauty, love, or simple presence—we build resilience that survives external change. Antara-prema means that even as technologies fail, institutions collapse, or ecosystems decline, there remains a source of meaning and connection that is irreducible. Mirabai teaches that this interior freedom is not selfish; it is what allows us to remain present with others through loss without becoming numbed or bitter. The examined heart reaches inward to find what cannot be lost.

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