Mirabai broke every social rule to honor her devotion to Krishna; this shows how Brahmaviharas may require us to violate conventional relationships to honor deeper love.
Mirabai's freedom was scandalous: she rejected her husband (though some accounts say she honored him spiritually), she left her family, she danced in public, she associated with low-caste saints, she refused the role of dutiful widow. She did all this not from rebellion but from unwavering fidelity to her love for Krishna. This challenges the modern assumption that Brahmaviharas practice means being nice, accommodating, conflict-avoiding. Mirabai teaches that true loving-kindness sometimes requires saying no, leaving relationships that constrain your authenticity, disappointing others' expectations. Her examined heart constantly asked: Am I honoring what I truly love, or am I performing for others' approval? Applied to relationships, this means that Buddhist metta is not sentimental niceness. It includes the capacity to set boundaries, to walk away from harm, to refuse complicity, to speak truth even when it disrupts. Mirabai's radical freedom came through radical fidelity—she was willing to lose everything conventional to honor one true love. This teaches that Brahmaviharas practice includes fierce compassion: sometimes the most loving action is to withdraw, refuse, or challenge, not from anger but from devotion to what is true.
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.