Mirabai's constant interrogation of her own motivations and attachments as a path to upekkha: equanimity rooted not in detachment but in truthful self-knowledge.
Mirabai's tradition demands relentless self-examination: examining the heart to distinguish true devotion from ego-inflation, genuine longing from possessiveness. This rigorous honesty directly serves upekkha, Buddhist equanimity. Often equanimity is misunderstood as indifference; Mirabai reveals it as clarity won through unflinching self-inquiry. When we examine the heart, we see our attachments, our conditional loves, our need for reciprocation—and in seeing them clearly, we are freed from their tyranny. This is true equanimity: not coldness but the freedom of seeing relationships clearly, without distorting them through projection or demand. In the context of brahmaviharas, this examined equanimity allows us to love others without requiring them to complete us, to celebrate their joy without resentment, to hold their suffering without collapsing. Mirabai shows that the examined heart—brutal in its honesty—becomes the ground of genuine, unclinging presence in relationship.
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