When Boundaries Were Drawn: The Absent Line in Valmiki's Ramayana and Its Later Implications The Missing Line in Valmiki's Original Text One of the most enduring images associated with the Ramayana is that of Lakshmana drawing a protective line around Sita before departing to search for Rama in the forest. This episode, known as the Lakshmanrekha, has become deeply embedded in popular consciousness and cultural discourse. However, a careful examination of Valmiki's Ramayana—the oldest and most authoritative version of this ancient text—reveals a startling truth: the Lakshmanrekha does not exist in the original narrative. In Valmiki's Aranya Kanda, when Rama pursues the golden deer and Lakshmana reluctantly leaves Sita alone to follow his brother, there is no mention of any protective line being drawn. Sita simply remains in the ashram, and when Ravana arrives disguised as a mendicant, she steps out of her own volition to offer him alms—a dharmic duty expected of hous...