Mirabai's fearless, often transgressive poetry models how naming the full range of grief—anger, confusion, abandonment—creates psychological and spiritual freedom.
Mirabai scandalized her society by singing of her love for Krishna in terms reserved for courtesans, rejecting family pressure and social convention. Her freedom came through radical emotional honesty. When processing collective grief, we often self-censor—performing appropriate sorrow while suppressing anger, resentment, or even indifference. Mirabai's example invites mourners to voice uncomfortable truths: the complexity of mourning public figures we may have ambivalent feelings about, the guilt of moving on, the strange relief sometimes mixed with sorrow. Her poetry demonstrates that authentic emotional expression—even messy, contradictory expression—liberates us from the double burden of grief plus shame about our grief. For collective mourning, this means creating spaces where people can voice the full spectrum of their responses to tragedy without judgment, trusting that emotional truth-telling is itself a form of spiritual freedom and healing.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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