The transformative practice of articulating your experience—through writing, art, or speech—as a way to witness and validate your boundaries rather than hide them.
Sahitya Sadhana—the spiritual practice of literature and expression—emerges from Mirabai's own method: she made her devotion, her struggle, her refusal public through poetry. This concept recognizes that boundaries strengthened through silence often remain fragile, while those expressed and witnessed become solid. When you articulate your boundaries—to yourself, to trusted others, in writing or art—you witness their legitimacy. Mirabai's poetry did not hide her unconventional choices; it broadcast them, transforming private rebellion into shared wisdom. In your life, Sahitya Sadhana might mean writing about your boundaries, speaking them aloud, creating art around them, or sharing your story with those who understand. This is not about performing for others but about giving form and witness to your truth. When your boundaries live only in silence and compromise, they remain fragile and guilty. When you express and articulate them, they become real, defendable, and ultimately, transformative for yourself and others.
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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