Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Freedom to Say No

Healthy attachment requires the right to refuse, protest, and set boundaries without losing connection or love.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai said no to her husband, no to her family, no to social conventions—she maintained fierce boundaries around her spiritual devotion. Yet she wasn't hostile or rejecting; her boundaries came from fierce self-respect, not contempt. Secure attachment requires this capacity. Anxious partners often cannot say no because they fear abandonment; avoidant partners say no reflexively, as a shield. Mirabai's example reveals a third way: clear boundaries as an expression of love and self-respect. The Freedom to Say No means you can disagree with your partner, decline requests, maintain separate preferences and practices, all while remaining securely attached. In fact, partners who cannot authentically say no often harbor resentment that erodes connection. Mirabai's no to social expectations was actually a yes to authentic relationship—with herself and with the divine. In romantic attachment, secure partners can voice objections, negotiate differences, and maintain separateness without either person interpreting this as withdrawal of love. This freedom paradoxically deepens trust because both people know they're choosing to stay, not trapped by fear or obligation.

Helpful guides
Mira
Love & Relationships
Peri
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