Akhila jnanani is the paradoxical wisdom of perceiving wholeness and sacred knowledge within fragmentation, loss, and the dissolution of former certainties.
Akhila jnanani—complete or total knowing—in Mirabai's tradition emerges not through intellectual accumulation but through the dissolution of the separate self. Loss fragments our former identity and certainties, and in that fragmentation, a paradoxical wholeness becomes visible: we recognize our interconnection with all beings who suffer, all who love and lose. Mirabai's radical rejection of social categories and conventional identity—caste, gender, propriety—was an embodied akhila jnanani: the deep knowledge that comes from being broken open to what really matters. In grief and creativity, this concept suggests that the shattering of your former self through loss can become a gateway to deeper knowing. You lose certainty and gain paradox; you lose the person you were and recognize that former self as partial, limited. From that fragmented place, you may perceive connections, compassions, and truths unavailable to your former wholeness. The creative work emerging from loss can carry this akhila jnanani—a wisdom born not from having all answers but from being radically open to not-knowing.
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