Moksha (liberation) in Mirabai's path arrives through surrendering the illusion of control, dissolving guilt rooted in the belief that you should have prevented loss.
Mirabai's radical devotion included a surrender of agency that scandalized her family: she chose the divine over duty, love over law. This teaches a crucial lesson about guilt: much of it stems from the false belief that you could or should have controlled outcomes beyond your power. Moksha, spiritual liberation, begins when you stop exhausting yourself trying to control the uncontrollable. Guilt often whispers, 'If only you had been more vigilant, more perfect, more present, loss would not have happened.' Mirabai's tradition counters this by asserting that some things belong to the divine order, not your responsibility. This does not mean abandoning care or accountability, but distinguishing between what you can actually influence and what you cannot. For those grieving, this framework allows accountability without self-annihilation. You can examine your actions honestly, make amends where possible, and release the fantasy that perfect vigilance would have prevented mortality, change, or loss. Liberation comes not from erasing guilt but from understanding its limits and redirecting energy toward love and connection rather than self-recrimination.
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