Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Bhakti-Centered No: Saying Refusal as Prayer

The practice of setting boundaries as an act of devotion, where refusal honors truth and protects the sacred space of the heart.

Mira
Why It Matters

In bhakti tradition, saying no is not rejection—it is alignment with truth. Mirabai said no to familial pressure, societal expectation, and patriarchal control, each refusal a prayer to her deeper devotion. A bhakti-centered no arises not from fear or punishment, but from commitment to what matters most. When setting boundaries in love, this framework asks: What am I protecting? What am I devoted to? Your no might protect your capacity for authentic presence, your spiritual practice, your creative work, or your integrity. Unlike shame-based refusal, a bhakti no is spoken with love and clarity, without apology or elaboration. It is the boundary that says: I cherish you and I cherish myself; therefore I cannot do this. This transforms boundary-setting from an act of separation into an act of deepening devotion to truth.

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