Mirabai's renunciation of ownership claims teaches sustained partnership that honors each person's freedom and separate being as essential to love's integrity.
Mirabai abandoned marriage, property, and conventional security—refusing to possess or be possessed. This reflects a yogic understanding: true love does not grip or demand exclusivity of being. In modern partnership, couples often unknowingly try to own each other—controlling choices, demanding transparency, merging identities. This creates suffocation disguised as closeness. Mirabai teaches that sustainable love requires releasing the fantasy of possession: you cannot own your partner's growth, inner life, or future. This seems to threaten commitment, yet it enables it. When you love someone without demanding they remain static, without punishing their independence, you create safety for authentic presence. Paradoxically, this non-possession strengthens long-term partnership because neither person feels trapped. Both can bring their whole selves. The commitment becomes conscious choice renewed, not obligatory merger. This is the love that endures.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.