I don't really see it that way at all. I don't think Halley was interested in "independence" the way we look at it today (post-feminist activism, or some sense of "equality" with men). I think, quite simply, she wanted to see "a real rose". Additionally, she was impressed with Rance's education (he taught her to read), his dedication to a more civilized way of solving problems (not thru gunfire), and the courage to risk his life for an ideal (her tender caring of him after the showdown).
In the end -- she had, no doubt, learned to read, seen a real rose and civilization up close. But, she may have recognized on her return and with the unappreciated loss of Tom that the values of a small Western town vs. Eastern manipulation and compromise (political deal-making, etc.) meant as much, or more, to her as did her original desire to escape its overwhelm. The solid and more natural certainties of home; a cactus rose (that was Tom to her); and the old West weren't all bad after experiencing the ambiguities and distances of the busier, wordier life; a real rose; and a vision of what the new West might actually be. Our origins are important and "new" and "change" aren't always an improvement when it comes to personal happiness. A lesson for us all -- men as well as women? Anyway, I think that's what Ford had in mind.
Btw, she loved both men but for different reasons -- which is why Ford needed stars of equal stature to play them.
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