Mirabai's ultimate freedom—from family, caste, convention, and even the need for reciprocation—was inseparable from her love; agape liberates both lover and beloved.
Mirabai's journey was toward radical freedom: she escaped her marriage, left her family, abandoned the constraints of widowhood and caste. Paradoxically, this liberation was achieved through deepening devotion, not rejecting it. Her freedom and her love were one movement. This reveals a crucial truth about unconditional love: it is not a constraint on freedom but its fullest expression. When love becomes conditional—requiring approval, reciprocation, or a specific form of relationship—it becomes a cage for both parties. Unconditional love, by contrast, frees the beloved from the burden of proving their worth and frees the lover from the exhaustion of control and negotiation. Mirabai's model shows that agape and freedom are inseparable: truly loving another means desiring their freedom, respecting their choices even when painful, and refusing to bind them to our needs. This has profound implications for intimate relationships, parenting, activism, and spiritual community. Unconditional love asks us to release our grip, trust the other's capacity for their own becoming, and find our deepest satisfaction in their authentic flourishing rather than their conformity to our vision.
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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