Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Body as Terrain of Devotion

Honoring physical desire, sensation, and embodied presence as sacred pathways to autonomy and authentic connection.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's poetry was erotic and embodied—she danced, she sang of Krishna's touch, she refused the ascetic denial of the body. Yet her embodiment was not indulgence but devotion. This is radical: the body is not an obstacle to spiritual autonomy but its very ground. Many traditions teach that freedom requires transcending the body; Mirabai teaches that freedom means fully inhabiting it. In Autonomy and Togetherness, this concept challenges disembodied relating—intellectual connection without physical presence, emotional intimacy without sensual aliveness. When we are dissociated from our bodies, we cannot truly know our own boundaries or desires. We become ghostly, unavailable. True autonomy includes bodily autonomy: the right to move, touch, be touched, say yes and no to physical intimacy. True togetherness includes sensual presence: looking at each other, listening with your whole body, allowing physical vulnerability. Mirabai's dancing and singing were acts of freedom and communion. She refused both prudishness and objectification, instead claiming her body as sacred territory. In relationships, this means: stay present in sensation, honor desire without shame, maintain physical boundaries, allow erotic aliveness within commitment.

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Mira
Love & Relationships
Peri
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