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The Disrobed Self: Authenticity Beyond Image

Mirabai famously danced publicly as a form of worship, transgressing norms of female modesty and propriety to express her truth.

Mira
Why It Matters

Historical accounts describe Mirabai dancing in the streets, in temples, in the presence of strangers—behaviors that violated every norm of upper-caste female propriety in her time. She disrobed herself of the costumes society required: the dutiful wife, the respectable woman, the person who hides her passion and ecstasy. This radical authenticity was her spiritual practice. In grief, we experience something similar: the masks we carefully maintained crack. The person we pretended to be for others becomes impossible to sustain when loss shatters us. Mirabai teaches that this shattering can be embraced as liberation. The creative work that emerges from grief is often our most disrobed, most authentic expression—unfiltered by the concern with who is watching or what they think. The artist in grief has less investment in appearing acceptable. This can produce work of unusual vulnerability and power. Mirabai's example suggests that authentic creativity requires shedding the costumes of acceptability, and grief, by breaking us, offers an opportunity to move through the world as our actual selves—flawed, passionate, real, and undisguised.

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