Bhava is emotional mood or state—the practice of accessing true feeling beneath the stories we tell about betrayal and harm.
Bhava in bhakti refers to the authentic emotional state beneath all performance and concept. In forgiveness work, this means distinguishing between the narrative ('he betrayed me, I must forgive') and the actual feeling (anger, disappointment, fear of abandonment). Mirabai's poems don't resolve emotions neatly; they dwell in contradictions—love and rage, devotion and loneliness—with radical honesty. For forgiveness, bhava asks: what do I actually feel beneath the 'should'? Often, genuine forgiveness requires first validating the real emotion: yes, you were hurt; yes, this matters. Only by meeting the actual bhava—the true emotional state—can forgiveness become authentic rather than a spiritual performance. This framework legitimizes anger as part of the forgiveness journey, not its opposite. It invites you to feel fully, which paradoxically releases the grip of unresolved emotion.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.