Mirabai's intense yearning for the divine mirrors the heart-opening that compassion (karuna) requires—the capacity to feel another's absence, pain, and deepest need.
Mirabai's devotional poetry expresses an aching, almost desperate love—the state of pining for union with the beloved. This emotional intensity, often dismissed as excessive in Western spirituality, is actually a profound training in empathy. Compassion requires feeling with another person, not just thinking about their suffering. Mirabai's bhakti teaches that karuna deepens when we allow ourselves to truly feel what another person feels—their longing, their loss, their yearning for connection. In relationships, this means moving beyond intellectual sympathy into genuine resonance. When we can access our own capacity for longing and vulnerability, we become better able to meet others' deep emotional needs without judgment. This transforms compassion from a principled stance into a lived, embodied sensitivity to another's inner world.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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