Saying no as a spiritual act aligned with one's deepest values and devotion.
Mirabai's refusal to obey her husband, her family, and social expectation was not rebellion for its own sake—it was allegiance to something greater. Her 'no' to convention was a 'yes' to Krishna, to truth, to freedom. This reframes boundary-setting from a negative act (saying no) into a sacred affirmation of what matters most. In relationships, a holy refusal might mean: 'No, I will not accept disrespect because I am devoted to my own dignity.' Or: 'No, I cannot merge my life entirely with yours because my relationship with myself comes first.' The sacred no honors what we love by protecting it from compromise. It requires courage because it often disappoints others. Mirabai's example shows that love—real love—sometimes demands we say no, and that refusal can be an expression of devotion rather than rejection.
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