Mirabai's radical surrender to love models a freedom distinct from both explosive acting-out and frozen emotional numbing—a third path.
Mirabai danced naked in the streets, abandoned her marriage, defied royal authority—yet this was not reckless rage but freedom born of absolute devotional surrender. This distinction is crucial for understanding grief and anger. Suppression is the false path of emotional freezing: we swallow our rage, numb our grief, and remain trapped. Acting-out is equally constrained: we explode, harm, purge, but remain enslaved to the trigger. Mirabai's path suggests a third way: surrendering our demand that reality be different than it is, while simultaneously being fully alive and honest about what we feel. This is not passivity but dynamic acceptance paired with fierce authenticity. Applied to grief and anger, the practice becomes: Can we feel the full force of our rage *and* release our insistence that the past be different? Can we grieve deeply *and* stop clinging to what we've lost? This paradoxical freedom emerges not from control but from radical honesty and willing surrender to what is.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.