Finding the presence and depth in aloneness that Mirabai discovered, transforming isolation into spiritual intimacy and self-knowing.
Mirabai's life was ultimately one of solitude—she wandered alone, danced alone, sang alone. Yet her bhakti shows that authentic solitude is not loneliness but profound aliveness with yourself and the sacred. After uncoupling, you face a particular kind of aloneness: the absence of the daily partnership, the quiet house, the identity as 'we.' This framework invites you to meet this solitude not as punishment but as opportunity. The examined heart, in Mirabai's teaching, deepens most in silence and solitude. She shows that you can be fully alive alone, that your consciousness can expand in quiet, that being with yourself can become a devotional practice. This doesn't mean spiritual bypassing of loneliness, but rather distinguishing between loneliness (disconnection, despair) and solitude (presence, depth, self-meeting). As you rebuild your life post-divorce, the invitation is to cultivate sacred solitude—time with yourself that's not empty but full, not isolating but intimately connecting you to what's real.
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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