Mirabai's pursuit of spiritual freedom through refusing social constraints teaches how mourning publicly can liberate us from enforced emotional silence.
Mirabai defied family, marriage, and caste to pursue her devotion to Krishna—she chose freedom over respectability. This radical autonomy extends to grief: true freedom includes the right to mourn openly, to name loss, and to grieve for public figures without shame or apology. Cultures that suppress public mourning or demand emotional control impose a form of bondage. Mirabai teaches that liberation begins when we stop performing for others and instead honor our authentic heart. Collective grief, when expressed freely, becomes an act of resistance against emotional colonization. To mourn a public figure fully—to allow tears, to speak loss, to gather with others in sorrow—is to reclaim freedom from the tyranny of detached professionalism or forced composure. This freedom is not indulgence; it is necessary for psychological and spiritual health, for it allows the heart to process what it has genuinely loved.
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