Mirabai's bhakti dissolves the boundary between joy and sorrow; extreme grief, fully felt and expressed, becomes a form of ecstatic experience.
One of the radical aspects of bhakti is its refusal to separate longing from fulfillment, sorrow from joy. Mirabai's most anguished verses sing with a kind of ecstatic intensity—the feeling is so acute it borders on the sublime. In Western culture, we often treat grief and ecstasy as opposites, but this framework recognizes them as neighboring territories. When grief is fully inhabited, when we stop muting it or managing it, it can open into something that resembles ecstasy: a dissolution of ordinary consciousness, an intensity that makes us feel radically alive, a connection to something beyond the personal self. Creative work emerging from this space has distinctive power—it isn't performed grief but lived grief, and that authenticity translates as spiritual experience for the witness. By sanctifying intensity itself—treating extreme feeling as sacred rather than pathological—we honor the depth of what we've lost and permit art of genuine power to emerge.
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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