Mirabai's poetry is relentlessly honest about her own contradictions, desires, and failures, modeling the practice of examining the heart as an act of love and truth-seeking.
Throughout her work, Mirabai turns her gaze inward with unflinching honesty. She examines her own contradictions—her devotion paired with resentment, her ecstasy with rage—not as problems to solve but as truths to speak. This practice of examining the heart is devotional: it is an offering of radical honesty to whatever we love. Applied to grief and creativity, the examined heart becomes a foundational practice. Before we can make art from loss, we must look clearly at what we actually feel, not what we think we should feel. Grief often contains things we don't want to admit: anger at the person who died, relief at their absence, shame at moving forward, guilt at forgetting. The examined heart invites us to name these contradictions without judgment. Mirabai shows that this introspection is not self-indulgent but essential to authenticity. When we examine our hearts and express what we find—the full messy truth—our work becomes trustworthy. Readers recognize themselves in that honesty. The examined heart transforms private confusion into universal expression.
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