The deliberate cultivation of delight, celebration, and rapturous feeling as a valid and necessary path to the sacred and to love.
Mirabai danced, sang, and celebrated her love with unrestrained joy—in a culture that often associated spirituality with renunciation and self-denial. Her ecstatic practice declared that the body, emotion, and delight are not obstacles to the divine but pathways to it. Joy is not frivolous or shallow; it is a profound form of gratitude and recognition that life itself is sacred. In the context of agape, ecstatic joy becomes revolutionary. We live in times of conflict, trauma, and separation; there is spiritual depth in sorrow and lament. But there is equally profound wisdom in choosing joy, in celebrating the other, in finding reasons to sing together. Mirabai's ecstatic practice teaches that agape is not grim duty but delight—the pleasure of recognizing the beloved, the happiness of being in genuine presence with another. When we practice joy across traditions—celebrating each other's festivals, finding humor and lightness in our differences—we access a love that is both passionate and playful. We remember that the ultimate spiritual truth might be not burden but bliss.
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