The conscious release of safety nets—status, family approval, financial security—that keep us bound to inauthentic roles and relationships.
Mirabai renounced the security of her position as a royal wife, widow with honor and provisions, and the protection of family name. These renunciations were not romantic rejection of all security but discerning release of securities that came at the cost of her soul. In exploring Autonomy and Togetherness, this reveals how we often remain in constraining relationships or communities because they provide false security—financial support, social status, identity, or belonging. We convince ourselves we cannot leave because we need these things. Mirabai asks: at what cost? When security requires self-betrayal, it's not security; it's a cage. This doesn't mean acting recklessly or rejecting all interdependence. Rather, it means becoming conscious of which securities we're actually choosing and which we're using to avoid the freedom and responsibility of autonomy. True autonomy requires willingness to live with less certainty. And paradoxically, this willingness often opens us to more genuine forms of security and togetherness—those built on authentic presence rather than coercive dependency.
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