Voluntarily releasing socially imposed identity to discover authentic desire and genuine connection.
Mirabai famously abandoned her role as princess and widow to become a wandering saint, rejecting the self that society had constructed for her. This renunciation wasn't nihilistic escape but clarifying choice: she shed the false self (dutiful daughter-in-law, chaste widow) to reveal the true self (devotee, lover, seeker). Contemporary life often confuses autonomy with maintaining all self-concepts simultaneously—performing for family, profession, partner, and peer group. Mirabai's radical move suggests that autonomy requires periodic stripping away of inauthentic roles. This doesn't mean abandoning all social participation but rather interrogating which aspects of your presented self align with your examined heart and which are merely inherited or imposed. In togetherness, this practice prevents resentment-laden relationships where you're partnered with someone's fantasy version of you. By knowing and claiming your true self first, you can meet others as equals, not as characters in their stories. Freedom, Mirabai shows, begins with refusing the self you don't actually are.
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