The bhakti vision of freedom (mukti) as liberation from the small self's grievances into participation in something larger.
Mirabai's ultimate freedom was not freedom from pain but freedom from the tyranny of the individual ego's story. Bhakti offers a radical reframing: instead of trying to solve our grief and rage, we dissolve the separate self that owns it. This doesn't mean denying real injury; rather, it means releasing identification with being the victim or the wronged one. This concept invites us to examine whether our rage is serving our liberation or our imprisonment. True freedom, in this tradition, is freedom to love, to serve, to connect—even while grief remains. When we examine rage underneath grief, we can ask: Is this rage keeping me bound to my story? Can I feel it fully while also releasing my need to be right about it? Can my grief become an offering rather than a wound I carry? This shift doesn't happen through willpower but through deepening devotion to something beyond our personal narrative.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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