Mirabai's unconditional love that transcended Krishna's actions or worthiness; how this applies to grieving flawed public figures without requiring moral perfection.
Mirabai loved Krishna—historically a complex, imperfect figure—without qualification or condition. She did not say "I will love you if you are worthy" but loved him as he was. This radical acceptance is difficult in contemporary culture, where public grief often requires the deceased to be flawless or fully legible. We ask: Did they deserve this mourning? Were they good enough? These questions fragment our collective heart. Mirabai's devotion teaches a different way: grief is not a reward for moral perfection but a spontaneous response of the heart. We can mourn people who were flawed, compromised, or even harmful in some dimensions, without erasing those truths. The grief and the criticism need not cancel each other. Public figures are humans—complex, contradictory. Allowing ourselves to grieve them fully, without requiring them to be saints, honors both our emotional truth and our ethical clarity. Mirabai's love was not naive; it was mature enough to hold paradox.
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