For Mirabai, love itself was the spiritual practice; relationships become a sadhana (disciplined spiritual path) that directly awakens the Brahmaviharas.
Mirabai did not separate devotional practice from daily life or relationship. Her love was her sadhana—the disciplined spiritual path through which she was transformed. This offers a revolutionary reframe for contemporary Buddhist practitioners: rather than seeking enlightenment outside of relationships, we can recognize that loving relationships are the sadhana. Each moment with another person is an opportunity to practice metta, karuna, mudita, and upekkha. Conflicts become teachings in non-reactivity and compassion. Moments of connection awaken sympathetic joy. The impermanence of intimacy deepens equanimity. The Brahmaviharas are not refined meditative states separate from life; they are the actual texture of a life well-loved. Mirabai's example liberates us from seeking enlightenment somewhere else, in another lifetime, through practices separate from our actual hearts and actual relationships. She shows that transformation happens in the crucible of love—examined, devoted, free, and radically honest.
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