Maintaining inner space and spiritual practice separate from partnership, preventing merger and preserving individual consciousness.
Mirabai's devotional singing and meditation were entirely hers—spaces where no one else could follow, claim, or define. Within arranged marriages, couples often merge identity, with individuals losing themselves in family roles and partnership dynamics. Sacred Solitude means protecting time, space, and practices that are entirely your own: prayer, art, friendship, movement, thought. This isn't coldness or withholding; it's spiritual hygiene. You maintain a continuous relationship with something larger than the partnership—whether conceived as divine, nature, creative truth, or your own authentic self. This solitude prevents you from becoming emotionally dependent on your partner's attention or approval. It allows you to develop wisdom and peace independent of the relationship's temperature. Paradoxically, when each partner maintains their own spiritual center, partnership becomes less desperate and more authentic. You show up as a whole person with your own inner life, not a fragment seeking completion through fusion.
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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