The paradox of Mirabai's radical freedom, which came through complete surrender to loss and love, offering a path through collective grief.
Mirabai abandoned family, social position, and conventional identity to follow her devotion. Her freedom was born from surrender—she gave up the small self to serve something larger. This radical freedom emerges not from denying grief but from moving through it completely. In collective mourning, surrendered sorrow means allowing the loss to change you rather than resisting that transformation. When a public tragedy shakes us, we often try to protect ourselves: "It doesn't affect me," "I didn't know them personally," "I need to move on." Mirabai models the opposite—she surrendered to the full current of her grief and in that surrender found liberation. She was no longer bound by fear of what others thought or who she "should" be. Applied to collective grief, this suggests that genuine freedom comes not from emotional armor but from letting the loss teach us about interconnection, mortality, and love. When we fully feel our part in human sorrow, we become free from the illusion of separation and control, discovering unexpected solidarity and meaning.
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