A framework for how individuals within families can authentically consent or dissent to arranged partnerships while maintaining relational integrity and truth.
Mirabai's defiance was not isolated individual rebellion; it affected her entire household and social network. Her choice to pursue spiritual devotion over conventional marriage rippled through family systems. This concept explores how personal decisions about arranged marriage inevitably implicate others. True consent requires honest communication: Can you tell your family if you genuinely cannot marry this person? If not, is that consent or coercion? Mirabai's framework suggests that relationships built on hidden dissent or enforced silence corrode integrity for everyone involved. This means some families need to develop capacity for honest dialogue where individual voice is valued, not just collective harmony. For those in arranged marriages, this concept asks: Can I speak my authentic experience to my family, even if it disappoints them? What would become possible if we collectively acknowledged both constraints and desires, rather than performing false unity? This builds resilience through truthfulness rather than false peace.
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