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Concept
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The Freedom in Acceptance (Mukti Through Loss)

Mukti—spiritual liberation—in Mirabai's vision emerges not despite loss and renunciation but through them, suggesting anticipatory grief as a path to freedom.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai chose freedom—freedom from social expectation, from the false self, from the need to please—even though it meant loss: loss of marriage prospect, family standing, conventional life. Her acceptance of these losses did not make her bitter; it freed her. In anticipatory grief, there is a hidden liberation available: the person we are clinging to, the version of ourselves attached to them, the future we imagined—we are being asked to release all of it now, in slow time, with intention. This is brutally hard and paradoxically freeing. Mirabai teaches that the deepest freedom comes from not needing things to remain as they are. In anticipatory grief, you are being offered (against your will) the liberation that comes from accepting impermanence. You cannot cling to permanence when it is clearly temporary. This acceptance doesn't erase love; it purifies it. You love not because you possess or control, but because love itself is worth the price of grief. This is mukti—freedom purchased through the acceptance of loss.

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Love & Relationships
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