A practice of compassionate self-inquiry inherited from Mirabai's introspective bhakti, observing grief reactions without self-condemnation.
Mirabai's poetry models radical honesty about inner turbulence—rage at Krishna, despair, ecstasy, confusion—all held within devotion. The examined heart is the capacity to witness your grief over lost identity without collapsing into shame or denial. When you grieve who you were, you may judge yourself harshly: "I was naive, blind, false." The examined heart instead asks: "What was I protecting? What did that identity serve?" This is not excusing harm but understanding context. Mirabai examined her contradictions: devoted wife, ecstatic mystic, social outcast. She held these without resolving them into neat narrative. Your examined heart allows you to grieve the old identity's genuine goodness while releasing its limitations. This honest witnessing is itself an act of freedom. You become capable of honoring who you were while grieving what you needed to shed.
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