Mirabai's introspective devotion as a method of knowing what is true and real when external authorities collapse.
Mirabai's refusal of external authority—her defiance of family, caste, and orthodoxy—rested on trust in the examined heart as a source of knowledge. She knew Krishna not through priests or texts alone, but through direct, scrutinized experience. As civilizations fracture and institutions lose credibility, the examined heart becomes crucial epistemology: a way of knowing what is real, what matters, and what must be grieved. This is not mere feeling but disciplined attention to the heart's deepest recognitions. The practice involves regular introspection, honest naming of contradictions, and resistance to convenient narratives. When systems fail, the examined heart asks: What do I actually know? What have I seen? What grieves me truly? Mirabai's devotional integrity modeled this—she demanded congruence between inner conviction and outer life. For anticipatory grief, the examined heart is the anchor that keeps us tethered to reality and meaning.
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