The distinction between freedom defined as escape from constraints and freedom as internal liberation of the heart, allowing authentic partnership within structures.
Mirabai's freedom was not primarily about escaping her marriage or family—she lived within constraints. Her freedom was internal: a liberated heart that could not be controlled because she aligned her devotion with her deepest values. This is crucial for arranged marriage. Partners may fantasize that freedom means escaping the arrangement, but Mirabai's example suggests that authentic freedom emerges through inner alignment, not external circumstance. You can be physically constrained and spiritually free, or physically free and spiritually imprisoned. In family-mediated partnership, sustainable satisfaction comes not from breaking constraints but from liberating yourself internally from resentment, victimhood, and inauthenticity. This might mean openly communicating boundaries to family, establishing privacy and decision-making autonomy with your partner, or claiming your sexuality and agency within the marriage. Inner freedom allows you to engage with family relationships authentically rather than from defensive reactivity. When both partners cultivate inner liberation, they can build genuine intimacy regardless of how the relationship began. The family context becomes less imprisoning because your essential freedom is already claimed internally.
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