Well I can answer this two different ways. The first sounds fatalist but much easier to accept and that would be that the only true freedom is found in death. Until death we are always bound by something, even if it's the pursuit of our own identity. Every pursuit outside of this just leads to some other form of bondage or "non-freedom".
The only other option I can give which is less popular and could get people to not like me is the freedom found in a restored relationship with G-d through recognizing the sacrifice of His son. I even hate typing it myself because of how much Christian rhetoric there is and how it's ruined the image of a loving G-d who let His son die as the ultimate blood sacrifice so no one would have to, but I do believe it. I believe G-d gave all of His creation complete and utter freedom and the consequences of our disobedience is pain and suffering. Not pain and suffering caused by G-d, but pain and suffering caused by the world that has been corrupted because of our disobedience. Now I know you can also say this is a lack of freedom, but that's what leads me back to the first response. If our mind is so focused on being obedient to G-d, the sacrifice of our own selfish desires grants us the ultimate freedom that obedience gives us.
RE: Thoughts on Freedom