Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Freedom Through Ritual Surrender

Mirabai's renunciation of social bonds for devotional freedom as parallel to how grief rituals free mourners from isolation through prescribed communal action.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's radical choice to abandon family, marriage, and social respectability for her devotion to Krishna represents a liberation into a larger truth. Paradoxically, she finds freedom through surrender—to love, to divine will, to the examined heart. Grief rituals accomplish something structurally similar: they free mourners by providing surrender points. In many cultures, grief is too large and unstructured to bear alone, leading to paralysis or despair. But rituals—whether sitting in silence, washing a body, preparing food for guests, or visiting a grave on specific days—provide choreography for grief. This surrender to ritual form paradoxically liberates: the mourner does not have to decide alone how to grieve or when to begin healing. The ritual decides. This creates freedom in two directions: freedom from the burden of solo decision-making, and freedom to experience grief fully within a contained, socially validated form. Mirabai's example suggests that true liberation comes not from escaping structure but from surrendering to structures that honor what is deepest in us—in her case, divine love; in grief rituals, the honoring of connection and loss.

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