Anger as a protective force that guards commitments to truth, love, and freedom when they are threatened or diminished by others.
Mirabai's fury was not random; it was the fury of fidelity—anger at anything that would lure her away from her devotion to Krishna, or that would have her betray her vow. This concept suggests that beneath many forms of grief-rooted rage lies a demand for loyalty—to yourself, to what you love, to your word. When anger erupts, pause and ask: What am I fiercely loyal to? What betrayal—of myself or of someone I love—is fueling this rage? Mirabai raged against a social system that demanded she become a widow in name only, that her grief be performed as obedience rather than lived as longing. Her anger protected her fidelity to her true love. For contemporary seekers, the fury of fidelity invites honest assessment: Are you raging because someone has demanded you abandon your integrity? Because you sense yourself compromising what matters most? This anger may deserve respect, not repression. It is the guardian of your truth.
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