Mirabai's radical freedom came through surrender to Krishna; this paradox reframes Buddhist equanimity (upekkha) as liberation within intimate bonds.
Mirabai's life was a scandal—a high-caste woman who abandoned her husband's household to dance ecstatically in temple courtyards, singing of her union with Krishna. Her freedom was not won through assertion but through surrender. She let go of social respectability, family duty, and ego-protection, surrendering instead to what she loved most. This paradoxical pathway illuminates upekkha (equanimity), the fourth Brahmaviharas, which is often misunderstood as detachment. True equanimity is not indifference; it is the freedom to remain present and balanced even when love is not returned, when circumstances are unjust, when loss is inevitable. In relationships, Mirabai's surrender teaches us to release the grip of control—to stop demanding that our partner validate us, perform our expectations, or remain unchanged. Surrender means trusting in love's intrinsic value regardless of outcome, fostering equanimity that allows the other person their full humanity and autonomy.
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