Strategic non-cooperation with unjust systems as devotional practice, modeled by Mirabai's refusal of worldly constraint.
Mirabai refused her arranged marriage, refused to be hidden by the palace, refused the gender roles her caste demanded. Her refusals were not reactive negation but creative acts—they made space for her true devotion, her song, her freedom. For anticipatory grief regarding civilization, strategic refusal becomes a key practice. This is not merely saying no but yes to something truer. What systems demand our participation that we no longer consent to? What roles, products, narratives, and institutions have we inherited but can now refuse? Refusal means examining each claim on our time, energy, and complicity: Is this mine to do? Do I agree? Mirabai's refusals required courage and clarity; so will ours. But they are creative because they release energy for what we actually value. In civilization's contraction, refusal—of overconsumption, of complicity, of false hope—becomes a spiritual practice and a political necessity, rooted in the examined heart's freedom.
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