The possibility of spiritual practice and personal integrity within committed relationships without requiring isolation or renunciation.
Though Mirabai's life was extraordinary, bhakti tradition values the householder saint—the person who maintains spiritual integrity and personal boundaries while remaining in family and intimate relationships. This addresses a common misconception that boundaries require distance, rejection, or solitude. In Boundaries in Love, this concept teaches that you don't need to leave to maintain your integrity; you need to stay conscious. You can love a partner while refusing to merge identities. You can share a life while maintaining private devotions, practices, and commitments that belong only to you. The household saint honors both connection and autonomy. This framework is especially relevant for practitioners who want to maintain committed partnerships but have witnessed how easily love becomes self-abandonment. The boundary here isn't geographic (leaving) but energetic and psychological (remaining yourself). Bhakti shows us that the deepest spiritual practice happens not in retreat from the world but in the midst of it, in the friction and negotiation of shared life.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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