Moksha in the bhakti path means liberation achieved through love, not escape from it, reframing grief as part of the soul's journey toward authentic freedom.
In traditional Hindu philosophy, moksha often means escape from the cycle of desire and suffering. But in bhakti traditions exemplified by Mirabai, moksha is freedom achieved precisely through love—freedom to love without reservation, without fear, without the ego's protective armor. Grief, in this framework, is not an obstacle to freedom but evidence that we've loved freely enough to risk loss. Mirabai's apparent 'madness'—her willingness to disregard social convention, family duty, and shame in pursuit of her beloved—represents a kind of freedom that Western psychology might pathologize but that her tradition recognizes as liberation. For the examined heart, this reframes the relationship between grief and love: we don't seek to be free from either, but rather to be free within them—to love and grieve without shame, defensiveness, or diminishment of either experience.
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