Mirabai broke caste, gender, and family boundaries to pursue devotion, showing how autonomy sometimes requires refusing inherited constraints.
Mirabai rejected her prescribed role as widow and noble wife, crossing caste and gender boundaries to practice bhakti alongside lower-caste devotees. Her boundary-breaking was not reckless rebellion but disciplined spiritual commitment. This concept applies to autonomy and togetherness by asking: which inherited boundaries serve us, and which imprison us? Autonomy requires the courage to examine and sometimes transgress rules that others expect us to follow. However, Mirabai's practice also shows that boundary-breaking requires clarity: she knew what she was choosing toward (devotion), not just what she was rejecting. In modern contexts, this means distinguishing between autonomy (thoughtful choice of your own path) and mere reactivity (rejecting all external structure). Togetherness also requires some boundary work—knowing which connections serve your integrity and which compromise it. Mirabai's life suggests that authentic togetherness is built with others who share your core commitments, not with those whose presence demands you betray yourself.
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