A reframing of celibacy as spiritual wholeness and autonomy, rather than incompleteness or waiting for a partner.
In a culture that treats unmarried individuals as unfinished, Mirabai's life testifies to another possibility: the sacred self-sufficiency of those devoted to a higher union. She never sought another human husband after her marriage ended, not from bitterness but from conversion—her consciousness had been reorganized around a different relationship. Sacred singleness does not mean isolation or rejection of love; rather, it means claiming wholeness within yourself. For celibate practitioners, this concept counters the internalized narrative that you are incomplete without sexual partnership. Instead, you become internally married to your purpose, your practice, your deepest values. This shift removes desperation from your relationships with others—you engage with people from wholeness, not need. You remain open to intimacy while not requiring romantic or sexual union to feel worthy, alive, or complete. Autonomy becomes devotion.
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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