Abhanga are devotional poems with cyclical structure; understanding that identity grief isn't linear but returns in spirals, each cycle releasing deeper layers of the old self.
Abhangas are bhakti poems, often in repeating verse forms that circle back on themselves—you think you've finished the thought only to return to it from a new angle. Mirabai's abhangas don't resolve in the Western narrative sense; they spiral. This form mirrors the actual experience of identity grief: you think you've released the old self, accepted the loss, moved forward—and then you encounter it again in a new context and must release it anew. The abhanga structure normalizes this spiraling rather than treating it as failure to 'get over it.' Each return to the grief is an opportunity for deeper release. You're not stuck; you're spiraling. The identity you lost may return to consciousness hundreds of times over years, each return offering a chance to grieve more completely, understand more deeply, and integrate the loss more fully. The abhanga teaches patience with cyclical healing and trust that each loop, though it revisits pain, also moves you incrementally toward wholeness.
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