Mirabai's refusal of social convention—dancing publicly, rejecting widowhood, claiming spiritual authority—models how agape sometimes requires breaking forms to honor essence.
Mirabai violated the norms of her time and caste: she danced in the temple, sang in the streets, rejected remarriage and widowhood's restrictions. Her transgression was not rebellion for its own sake but love's fiercer loyalty to the divine beloved over social approval. This concept challenges a common misconception about unconditional love: that it requires passivity or acceptance of unjust structures. Instead, Mirabai teaches that agape can be fierce, disruptive, and boundary-breaking when love and justice demand it. Unconditional love for another person may require refusing to honor systems that diminish them. Her example illuminates how agape crosses boundaries of propriety when those boundaries silence truth or protect harm. For practitioners, this means examining which norms we uphold out of genuine wisdom and which we maintain from fear or conditioning. Sacred wildness asks: What would loving without reservation—both tenderly and fiercely—require me to release or transform?
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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