Mirabai's devotional defiance—singing truth to power, choosing the beloved over social obligation—as a model for resisting normalization of collapse.
Mirabai's bhakti was not private mysticism but embodied resistance. She sang in public, danced, rejected caste and gender norms, prioritized her devotion to Krishna over family duty and social position. Her love was revolutionary. Applied to civilizational anticipatory grief, bhakti practice becomes active defiance against the narrative of inevitability and apathy. It means refusing to perform normalcy when systems are failing, choosing to voice truth even when it isolates us, continuing to love and create beauty as a form of resistance. Bhakti-as-resistance is not militant aggression but a fiercer vulnerability—showing up fully, emotionally alive, devoted to what is sacred (relationships, earth, justice, meaning) rather than what is profitable. In times of collapse, this devotional defiance prevents us from becoming numb; it keeps our humanity alive and makes change-work sustainable by grounding it in love rather than burnout.
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