Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Bhakti as Refusal: The Spiritual No

Recognizing that sometimes the deepest spiritual practice is saying no—to compliance, to false peace, to structures that demand we betray ourselves.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's bhakti was inseparable from her refusal: she said no to the life her family demanded, no to the invisibility expected of widows, no to the division between 'spiritual' and 'embodied,' no to the claim that her desire and longing were shameful. Bhakti is often understood as devotional yes—yes to love, yes to the divine. But Mirabai shows us the equal importance of the spiritual no. Applied to grief and rage, this concept teaches that sometimes the most mature spiritual response is refusal: 'No, I will not forgive prematurely'; 'No, I will not smile through my devastation'; 'No, I will not abandon my own needs'; 'No, I will not participate in a system that requires my silence.' The spiritual no is not bitterness; it is clarity. It is anger's gift when wielded consciously—the ability to draw a boundary, protect what is sacred, and refuse complicity with harm.

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