The practice of loving without assurance of return, reciprocity, or salvation—faith that love itself is the entire reward and meaning.
Niradhara means 'without support' or 'unsupported.' Mirabai loved Krishna without the guarantee of union in this lifetime. She had no promise of recognition, rescue, or even the beloved's response. Her love was radically unsupported by outcome. This is the ultimate maturity of agape: it does not love in order to be loved back, to achieve spiritual status, or to feel good about itself. It loves because love is the nature of the awakened heart. Niradhara practice mirrors the Christian mystics' 'dark night of the soul,' the Sufi's tawhid (pure monotheism), the Buddhist's renunciation of attachment to results. In daily life, niradhara asks: Can you love your child without requiring gratitude? Your friend without assurance of loyalty? Your community without proof of change? This radical unsupport is where agape is finally tested and proven. When love persists without external validation, it becomes rooted not in emotion or reward but in the soul's own nature. It is the purest form of freedom.
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