Using devotion as permission to defy oppressive social expectations, grounding boundary-breaking in spiritual conviction.
Mirabai's bhakti was radical because it defied her culture's rules for women. She danced publicly, rejected her husband's death-bed demands, lived as renunciate when society expected widow's silence, and sang erotic devotional poetry in patriarchal space. Her boundaries weren't polite requests; they were acts of spiritual defiance grounded in loyalty to something larger than social approval. For modern boundary-setters, especially those from cultures or families with rigid rules, this offers permission: your boundaries need not be justified to those who made the rules you're breaking. If a family demands you stay silent about abuse, your boundary is an act of bhakti—devotion to your own wholeness. If a partner requires your self-erasure, your boundary is spiritual resistance. Mirabai shows that boundaries aren't always diplomatic. Sometimes boundary-setting means standing alone, losing approval, being called selfish. By framing boundaries as spiritual practice rather than personal rebellion, you access courage beyond people-pleasing.
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