A philosophical term for aversion and repulsion that reframes rage as a valid response to harm rather than a character flaw.
Dvesha, aversion, is one of the primary obstacles in classical yoga philosophy—but Mirabai's tradition suggests a subtler reading. Rage is often dvesha: a fierce pushing-away of what harms you. Instead of suppressing this aversion, bhakti practice asks: What are you protecting? What boundary does your rage defend? Mirabai rejected social convention that would have silenced her; her defiance was dvesha toward a system that demanded her erasure. When grief lives as unexpressed aversion, it calcifies into resentment. By naming dvesha clearly—I reject this, this harms me, I turn away from this—you honor the intelligence in your rage. You stop judging yourself for the boundary your body and heart are drawing. This transforms rage from a shameful emotion into a form of self-respect, a no that protects your capacity to say yes to what truly calls you.
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