The bhakti practice of transforming pain, longing, and grief into states of spiritual intensity and joy, not by denying suffering but by transfiguring it.
Mirabai's ecstatic states—her dancing, singing, and visionary experiences—weren't escape from her grief but transformation of it. In bhakti philosophy, all intense emotion becomes fuel for devotion: grief, longing, rage, despair can be transmuted into ecstatic connection when directed toward the divine. This isn't spiritual bypassing but alchemical practice. Applied to anticipatory grief, ecstasy becomes a real option: the intensity of what we're feeling—the fear, the sadness, the urgency—can be channeled into moments of aliveness, connection, beauty, and fierce tenderness. This requires us to stop trying to manage emotions and instead to fully feel them, to let them move through us into creative and devotional action. A person grieving civilization can also experience the ecstasy of deep conversation, of love shared in crisis, of beauty persisting, of meaningful work. Mirabai's life shows these are not contradictions. Ecstasy as emotional transmutation means we don't have to choose between feeling our grief and experiencing joy—we can hold both in the intensity of full presence.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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