The bhakti literary archetype of the wronged, furious lover whose anger becomes her most powerful expression of devotion and autonomy.
Khandita nayika—the abandoned, deceived, enraged beloved—is a classical bhakti archetype that Mirabai embodied and transformed. In traditional poetry, the khandita nayika's fury at her lover's betrayal is not portrayed as unspiritual but as the fiercest expression of her love and self-respect. Mirabai weaponized this archetype: her rage at patriarchal marriage, her anger at being deemed mad, her furious devotion to Krishna became a model of feminine power that rejected victimhood. This framework legitimizes anger as a sign of clarity and boundaries, not spiritual failure. The rage underneath often stems from violations of our integrity; honoring this anger means honoring ourselves. By recognizing ourselves as khandita nayika—the one who loves fiercely and refuses to diminish her truth—we transform victimhood into agency, and fury into the voice of our deepest values and freedom.
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