The discriminating awareness of which emotional state you're in—and thus which practices, responses, and insights are available now.
Avastha bodha refers to clear knowledge of your condition or state. In classical Indian thought, each state of consciousness (waking, dreaming, deep sleep, and transcendent) offers different knowledge and requires different practices. Applied to rage and grief, avastha bodha means developing precision about your emotional state right now. Am I in acute grief requiring comfort? Justified rage calling for action? Habitual resentment disguising fear? Each state requires different approaches. Mirabai's poetry shifted with her condition: sometimes lament, sometimes defiance, sometimes ecstatic surrender. She did not force one response across all states. This framework prevents both spiritual bypassing (forcing peace when fierce clarity is needed) and emotional stagnation (refusing to move beyond righteous anger). When examining the rage underneath, avastha bodha asks: What state am I actually in? What does this state need? What would be a genuine response versus a habitual reaction? This discrimination itself becomes liberating.
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