Mirabai's introspective devotion models how to use heartbreak as an opportunity for deep self-inquiry rather than projection or blame.
Mirabai's poetry is relentlessly introspective—she questions her own desires, her attachments, her longing. When trust is broken, we typically examine the other person's motives and character. The examined heart flips this: it asks what you ignored, what you needed from the other person, where you abandoned yourself. This is not self-blame; it's discernment. Mirabai's tradition teaches that betrayal often reveals where we've been seeking wholeness in another rather than cultivating it within. Through sustained inquiry—journaling, meditation, honest reflection—you examine: What did I overlook? Where did I suppress my own knowing? What void was I asking them to fill? This practice transforms victimhood into wisdom. You become the hero of your own inquiry, not a passive sufferer of another's wrongdoing. The examined heart recognizes complicity not as guilt, but as agency reclaimed.
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