A willingness to release social expectations and material security to pursue truth and creative calling, modeled by Mirabai's abandonment of worldly status.
Mirabai chose devotion over dynasty. She left the palace, rejected the demands of her in-laws, and lived as a wandering devotee—a radical act for a 16th-century royal widow. This renunciation was not ascetic rejection of life but a fierce prioritization of inner truth and divine love over social belonging and safety. Her freedom came through releasing what others valued: status, security, respectability. For contemporary creatives grieving loss, the renunciate's freedom offers a paradoxical gift: sometimes grief forces us to release what we thought we needed. The loss becomes permission to question whether old structures (careers, relationships, identities) actually served us. Mirabai's example suggests that creative freedom often requires renouncing not material goods but false loyalties—to others' expectations, to the person you thought you'd be. This liberation, though painful, opens space for the art only you can make.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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