The relationship archetype of Radha and Krishna—loving without ownership or conventional claim—as a model for LGBTQ+ partnerships that refuse possessiveness and honor autonomy.
Radha's love for Krishna in bhakti tradition is radical: she loved without marriage, without social claim, without expectation of possession or exclusivity in conventional terms. Her love was pure yearning and devotion, not economic arrangement or property claim. This archetype challenges fundamental assumptions about partnership. Most romantic models rest on some form of possession: owning your partner's sexuality, future, loyalty. LGBTQ+ communities, having often been excluded from legal marriage, sometimes maintain more fluid relational structures. Radha's paradox offers spiritual grounding for this fluidity: you can love someone completely while honoring their autonomy, their other loves, their right to become differently. This is especially valuable for queer and trans people, who may practice polyamory, non-traditional commitment, or relationships that resist singular ownership. Radha teaches that the deepest intimacy doesn't require total possession. Partners can love fully while remaining fundamentally free. This paradox—complete devotion without claimed ownership—liberates both people to grow without betrayal.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.