What does pativratā mean?
Synthesized from Source
definition
"Pativratā is not a spiritual ideal but a social role where a woman, through vows and restrictions, seeks to reform her husband, wielding power by policing his conduct in the name of virtue."
According to Osho, pativratā isn’t a lofty spiritual ideal but a plain social role: the wife who keeps her husband under a regimen of vows—fasts, early rising, no smoking, no cards, no cinema—constantly ‘reforming’ him through religion and morality. It reflects a power trade-off: denied outer freedoms, women wield leverage by policing men’s conduct in the name of virtue.
Pativratā means a wife who makes her husband follow lots of religious rules and promises—it’s control, not mysticism.
Why this matters practically
- Helps separate genuine spirituality from moral policing and guilt.
- Reveals family power dynamics, encouraging mutual respect over control.
- Invites couples to share values without weaponizing religion.
- Reveals family power dynamics, encouraging mutual respect over control.
- Invites couples to share values without weaponizing religion.
AI Confidence Score: 98%
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