Recognizing aversion and resistance within grief—the desire to escape or deny loss—as part of the honest examination required by bhakti.
Dvesha, the Sanskrit term for aversion or revulsion, names one of the fundamental emotional movements in consciousness. In bhakti practice, dvesha is not condemned but examined. When collective grief strikes, dvesha emerges as the desire to escape, to distract, to deny, to move on too quickly. Mirabai's tradition teaches that the examined heart must acknowledge this aversion without judgment. Much contemporary grief culture pathologizes normal resistance to loss, pressuring people toward premature 'acceptance' or 'healing.' The bhakti path offers honesty instead: Yes, the heart recoils from pain. Yes, we seek distraction. This is human and natural. But beneath dvesha lies the deeper current of love and longing. By examining our aversion without surrendering to it, we honor both the reality of suffering and our human capacity to survive it. Collective mourning becomes more authentic when it includes the full spectrum—not just tears but also the restless turning away, the moments of numbness, the contradictory impulses. This framework validates the messy, non-linear nature of shared grief.
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