Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Grief as Soil for Equanimity

Mirabai's songs of separation and loss show how fully facing grief—rather than suppressing it—cultivates the deep acceptance at the heart of upekkha.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai did not shy from grief; her devotional poetry overflows with the anguish of spiritual and personal loss. In Buddhist practice, upekkha (equanimity) is often misunderstood as indifference, but Mirabai reveals it as something far richer: the capacity to hold all of life's pain without being shattered by it. When we examine our hearts in relationship, we meet loss—unmet needs, separation, mortality. Rather than numbing this grief or grasping at permanence, Mirabai's path invites us to sing our sorrow, to make it sacred. This radical acceptance of impermanence and suffering becomes the foundation for genuine equanimity. Through her example, we learn that equanimity grows not from detachment but from the courage to love fully despite inevitable loss.

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