Mirabai's practice of interrogating her own heart and motivations as essential to authentic devotion and honest Brahmaviharas practice.
Mirabai's domain includes the examined heart—a commitment to radical self-knowledge within devotional practice. She questioned social conventions, her own desires, and the nature of her love for Krishna, refusing to accept received answers. This introspective dimension parallels Buddhist mindfulness and sati (remembering), where practitioners examine their intentions, patterns, and attachments. Within Brahmaviharas practice, the examined heart prevents spiritual bypassing: we cannot genuinely extend metta if we ignore our resentments, mudita if we deny jealousy, or karuna if we reject our own suffering. Mirabai's poetry reveals her struggle with doubt, physical desire, and the gap between aspiration and reality. By bringing this honesty into relational practice, we acknowledge that Brahmaviharas are not perfected states but ongoing practices requiring continuous self-inquiry. The examined heart asks: Am I practicing from genuine compassion or from fear? Do I extend equal kindness to those I dislike? Can I hold both my limitations and my capacity for love simultaneously? This integration of introspection and devotion creates authentic presence.
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