Honoring natural rhythms of closeness and solitude rather than demanding constant intimacy or perpetual independence.
Mirabai's devotion was not constant ecstasy; it moved through phases—longing, separation, union, longing again. Her poetry captures these seasons. Relationships too have natural rhythms: seasons of intense closeness, seasons of necessary distance, seasons of quiet companionship. Seasonal boundaries reject the myth that healthy relationships are constantly connected or that love means always being available. Instead, they honor the natural ebb and flow of human capacity and need. Sometimes you need deep togetherness; sometimes you need protected solitude. Sometimes your partner needs space; sometimes they need assurance. The rigidity lies in demanding one constant mode. Mirabai's practice teaches that these shifts are not failures—they are the music of love itself. By naming and normalizing seasonal boundaries—seasons when you are more socially engaged, seasons when you withdraw, seasons when your partner needs you more—you create permission for both people to be human. Intimacy deepens not through constant merger but through honoring each person's authentic rhythm.
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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