Mirabai's practice of rigorous self-inquiry into the heart's attachments reveals which griefs belong to love and which belong to ego—essential for untangling anticipatory sorrow.
Mirabai's spirituality was never escapist; it was a direct examination of the heart's movements, desires, and resistances. In anticipatory grief, the examined heart becomes a crucial tool: we must ask whether we grieve the loss of the person or the loss of our identity, our role, our sense of control. Mirabai faced brutal external circumstances—a hostile family, a life deemed shameful—and responded with radical honesty about her own heart. This same honesty applied to anticipatory grief asks: Am I grieving their death, or my inability to save them? Am I mourning their absence, or my dependence? This discernment doesn't eliminate grief but purifies it, transforming self-protective sorrow into compassionate love. The examined heart distinguishes between the ego's despair and the soul's capacity to hold both love and letting go simultaneously.
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