Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Freedom as Groundlessness

Reinterpreting the loss of identity as an invitation to freedom from the need for solid ground.

Mira
Why It Matters

When identity dissolves, groundlessness feels terrifying—there's no solid foundation for who you are. Mirabai teaches a paradox: true freedom requires releasing the need for fixed ground. She abandoned palace security and social position, choosing the uncertainty of wandering devotion. This concept invites you to shift perspective on your lost identity: the ground you stood on was always temporary, and grieving its loss can awaken you to deeper freedom. Most identities are constructions—built from roles, relationships, achievements, and narratives. When they crumble, panic often follows. But Mirabai's example suggests that stability itself is an illusion; freedom lies in dancing without needing solid ground. This doesn't minimize your grief; rather, it suggests that beneath the pain is liberation from the exhausting work of maintaining a fixed self. The examined heart, in this light, discovers that identity loss opens possibility—you are not fixed to who you were, and this groundlessness is not your enemy but your teacher toward authentic freedom.

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