Mirabai's refusal to hide her love and longing models how equanimity (upekkha) emerges not from detachment but from courageous truthfulness.
Mirabai scandalized her family and society by publicly declaring her love for Krishna, refusing to perform conventional wifehood or hide her spiritual passion. Her freedom came not from transcending emotion but from complete honesty about it. Buddhist equanimity (upekkha) is often misunderstood as indifference; Mirabai reclaims it as fearless clarity. True equanimity means seeing clearly without distortion—seeing both our love and its costs, our attachments and their impermanence, without needing to deny or dramatize. In relationships, this is revolutionary: instead of managing emotions strategically or performing expected feelings, we practice transparent authenticity. Mirabai shows that when we stop hiding—from ourselves and our companions—a natural equipoise emerges. We remain engaged and caring, yet unshaken by outcomes. We love without clinging, grieve without despair, rejoice without inflation. This equanimity rooted in honesty creates relational safety; others trust someone willing to be genuinely seen.
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