Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Bhakti as Radical Softness

Practicing tenderness and vulnerability as spiritual strength during collective mourning, rejecting the hardening that can accompany public loss and cynicism.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's bhakti was radically soft—she wept, she longed, she remained open-hearted despite betrayal and loss. In a world that demanded she harden herself for survival, she chose instead to feel everything fully. This softness was her power. Collective grief often triggers defensiveness: communities protect themselves by numbing or by turning grief into anger or blame. Radical softness is the counter-move—choosing to remain tender even when it's uncomfortable. This doesn't mean passivity; Mirabai's softness coexisted with fierce conviction. For communities mourning public figures or tragedies, bhakti softness means resisting the hardening that comes from repeated exposure to loss. It means maintaining capacity for empathy, for being moved, for crying together. Radical softness in the face of tragedy is actually a form of resistance to the systems that would have us accept loss as normal and move on efficiently. Mirabai teaches that feeling deeply is how we stay human and connected.

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