The recognition that rage often signals bondage—to expectation, duty, or others' definitions—and that genuine liberation requires addressing what enslaves us.
Mirabai's greatest freedom came through her refusal to remain bound by role, family, caste, or respectability. Her rage at being confined, at having her spirituality denied, at having her body claimed by patriarchal duty—this rage was not a spiritual problem but a liberation call. The concept here is that rage often signals we are being held against our will, that our truth is being denied, that we are enslaving ourselves to false identities. The rage underneath grief frequently includes rage at captivity: 'I should be allowed to express this differently'; 'I should not have to smile'; 'My grief threatens someone else's comfort, so I'm being asked to contain it.' Examining anger through the lens of freedom asks: What am I being asked to surrender that is actually mine to keep? What systems am I complying with that contradict my deepest truth? Sometimes spiritual work is not transcending anger but honoring it as freedom's call.
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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