Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Liberation as Relational Flowering

Mirabai's ultimate freedom is found through intensifying relationship rather than transcending it, reframing moksha as relational flourishing.

Mira
Why It Matters

In Hindu philosophy, moksha often means liberation from the cycle of rebirth, transcendence of the personal. But Mirabai's moksha is paradoxical: she becomes most free not by detaching from her love for Krishna but by surrendering entirely into it. Her liberation blossoms within relationship, not beyond it. This offers a profound reframing for Buddhist practitioners often taught that attachment is suffering's root. Mirabai suggests that the problem is not relationship itself but the grasping quality of attachment. When we release the need to control outcomes and simply practice presence and devotion to those we love, something liberatory happens. The brahmaviharas, when matured, become natural expressions of a liberated heart. We don't practice loving-kindness to reach enlightenment; enlightenment blooms as we practice loving-kindness authentically. In relationships, this means freedom emerges through deepening intimacy, not transcending it. The examined heart finds its fullest expression in devoted presence to particular others, in willingness to be transformed through relationship, in allowing love to remake us continuously.

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Mira
Love & Relationships
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