Autonomy expressed through conscious commitment to what you love most, rather than what you're obligated to maintain.
Mirabai's radical act was choosing her devotion—to Krishna, to the path of bhakti, to freedom itself—rather than accepting the devotion prescribed for her (as dutiful widow, obedient daughter, wife). This reframes devotion from a burden imposed externally to a freedom claimed internally. You have agency in determining what receives your love, energy, and presence. This is crucial for the autonomy-togetherness question: Are you together with someone because you authentically choose that bond, or because you feel obligated, trapped, or afraid to be alone? The examined heart asks this regularly. Mirabai teaches that the deepest freedom is the freedom to commit—to choose devotion consciously. This is different from compulsion or guilt-driven obligation. When you choose your devotion—whether to a person, a practice, a vocation, or a vision—you're exercising autonomy in service of togetherness. The commitment itself becomes an expression of freedom, not a constraint on it. This requires regularly revisiting your choices: Do I still choose this bond? Has it changed? Have I changed? Can I re-commit consciously? This ongoing choice-making preserves both your autonomy and the vitality of your togetherness.
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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