The aesthetic and emotional principle that love requires mutual resonance; when rasa is absent, boundaries protect us from one-sided depletion.
Rasa is the emotional essence or flavor of an experience—in love poetry and devotion, it is the mutual resonance between lover and beloved. In Mirabai's bhakti, rasa was the felt experience of connection with Krishna. Applied to human relationships, rasa teaches that love requires reciprocal attunement: you feel seen, the other feels known. When rasa is absent—when one person is always giving and the other always taking, when emotional resonance is one-directional—boundaries become necessary. A boundary here says: I need reciprocal care. I need to feel the resonance of being loved, not just loving. This concept helps us name what feels wrong in relationships that lack true connection. Boundaries around one-sided love are not selfish; they are honest acknowledgments that rasa, true emotional reciprocity, has become impossible.
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