Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Freedom Through Surrender: The Paradox of Devotion

Mirabai chose complete surrender to Krishna, which paradoxically freed her from family, caste, and social expectation; this reveals how agape liberates us from conditional attachments when we stop defending the separate self.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's life embodies a paradox: by surrendering entirely to her devotion to Krishna, she achieved extraordinary freedom. She abandoned her marriage, rejected her family's demands, and danced publicly despite social condemnation—all because her surrender to divine love superseded every other obligation. Western culture typically equates freedom with autonomy and control, but Mirabai teaches a different freedom: liberation through radical surrender. For agape across traditions, this paradox is crucial. When we release the demand that others meet our needs, that they prove themselves worthy, that they change to suit us, we become free. Surrender does not mean passivity or self-erasure; it means releasing the exhausting pretense that we can control outcomes or secure permanent safety. Mirabai's freedom emerged precisely from her refusal to defend her separate interests. In this light, agape is not self-sacrifice but self-liberation—the freedom discovered when we stop clinging and start trusting the larger love that moves through all beings.

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