Mirabai's fierce protection of her body and sexuality as expressions of her spiritual sovereignty and refusal of patriarchal control.
Mirabai's husband attempted to control her through her body; her family offered her to powerful men as alliances. She refused. She danced, she wore what she chose, she gave her body's devotion to the divine rather than to patriarchal claim. This is foundational boundary work. Your body is your first boundary, your most sacred territory. Many people—especially those socialized as female—learn early that their bodies are not theirs: available for family use, for marital claim, for social judgment. Mirabai reclaims the body as the seat of spiritual sovereignty. Boundaries in love must include bodily boundaries: consent for touch, autonomy over sexuality, refusal of violation. If someone pressures you into physical intimacy you don't want, refuses your sexual boundaries, or uses your body as leverage, no other boundary matters more. The examined heart knows: this body is mine. My touch is sacred. My refusal is absolute.
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