Questioning cultural norms about 'appropriate' grief and mourning, releasing judgment about how others (or you) grieve public loss.
Mirabai scandalized her society by abandoning her husband, dancing ecstatically in temples, and refusing conventional roles expected of women. Her life challenges what culture deems acceptable, dignified, or proper. In collective grief, people mourn differently: some weep publicly, some remain silent; some create art, some march for justice; some take years to process loss while others seem to move on quickly. Rather than judging these variations against an arbitrary standard of 'appropriate' grief, Mirabai's model honors the heart's authentic expression. Cultural conventions about grief often serve to minimize or control sorrow— 'Be strong,' 'Don't cry,' 'Think of the good times'—rather than allow genuine processing. Breaking these conventions means creating space for grief's full spectrum: anger, confusion, ecstasy, longing, even occasional joy. When mourning public figures or tragedies, releasing judgment about how others grieve allows more authentic community, more support for those suffering, and more honest collective reckoning with loss. Mirabai teaches that true freedom includes freedom to grieve in ways that feel spiritually necessary, even when unconventional.
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