Mirabai cultivated inner aloneness with the divine while living in visible community; she models togetherness that includes essential privacy.
Mirabai's most intimate relationship was with Krishna—private, interior, unreachable by family or social structure. Paradoxically, this sacred solitude made her more available to her community of devotees. She was not lonely because she was alone; her inner communion gave her presence and authenticity. In Autonomy and Togetherness, this reveals a crucial distinction: healthy togetherness requires that each person maintain an inviolable interior space—a sanctuary of thought, spirituality, desire, or simply being—that belongs only to oneself. Relationships deteriorate when we demand access to every corner of another's inner life, or when we abandon our own interior world to merge with another. This concept teaches: What is your sacred solitude? What inner relationship must you protect to show up authentically in togetherness? Can you love someone while honoring their unreachable depths?
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.