The examined heart—Mirabai's refusal of false piety—invites communities to ask what the loss reveals about themselves, their values, and their capacity to love.
Mirabai defied social expectation and examined her own heart ruthlessly. She did not accept easy answers about devotion or duty. When we collectively mourn, we often use the moment to perform who we think we should be rather than honestly feel who we are. The examined heart asks: What did this person represent to me? Where do my tears truly come from? What does my grief reveal about what I value, what I fear losing, what I wish I'd said or done? In public tragedy, the examined heart resists both sentimental overdrive and cynical detachment. It creates space for uncomfortable truths: that we grieve strangers sometimes more than neighbors, that loss reshuffles our priorities, that grief reveals what we actually care about beneath surface claims. This practice deepens authentic collective witnessing.
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