Using public tragedies and the failure of figures we admired to deepen spiritual maturity, transforming shattered expectations into opportunities for more honest devotion.
Mirabai's devotion deepened through disillusionment—renouncing worldly securities and social identity to commit to an invisible beloved. When public figures disappoint or tragedy reveals systemic failures, communities face collective disillusionment. Rather than treating this as spiritual failure, Mirabai's teaching suggests disillusionment can mature devotion. We might grieve not just the person or tragedy itself but the loss of innocence, the shattering of beliefs about safety or progress. This grief is sacred—it signals movement toward more honest understanding. Collective disillusionment becomes devotional practice when communities resist the impulse to quickly restore false certainties, instead sitting with the gap between what we believed and what's true. Mirabai's freedom came through releasing illusions; collective maturity emerges similarly. Mourning the actual world rather than our fantasies about it, grieving systems rather than only individuals, transforming disillusionment into deeper commitment to truth—this is how tragedy becomes spiritual teacher and collective grief becomes path to wiser community.
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