Understanding repressed rage as inverted love—the examined heart learns to decode what angers us as what we most deeply care about.
Mirabai's tradition teaches that anger often masks devotion: we rage at what we love, demand from what we cherish, and resist what threatens our deepest values. This framework uses psychological shadow work within a spiritual context. When we examine our rage—especially the rage underneath, the primal fury we fear—we often find it points toward something we love fiercely. Mirabai's anger at her family's betrayal was inseparable from her love for them and her commitment to authentic connection. Her rage at social constraint revealed her devotion to freedom and dignity. The examined heart learns to ask: What am I really angry about? What do I love that's being violated or denied? This reframing transforms anger from an isolated, destructive emotion into a compass pointing toward our deepest values. Shadow devotion acknowledges that our fury is often our fidelity in disguise.
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