The tantric recognition that anger contains divine power and creative force when directed with consciousness and intention.
Hindu philosophy honors krodha shakti—the power of righteous anger—as a manifestation of divine force, not merely a destructive emotion. Mirabai's defiance of her family's authority and rejection of patriarchal control required this sacred anger. She danced publicly when women of her status were forbidden to; she refused remarriage; she claimed spiritual authority her society denied her. This rage was not pathological—it was liberation. The rage underneath grief often contains legitimate protest: against injustice, against loss, against betrayal. The examined heart can distinguish between destructive, unconscious anger and krodha shakti—anger that protects boundaries, names truth, and fuels transformation. For those carrying unexamined anger, this framework offers validation: not all rage is something to transcend, but some is something to claim. When we examine what our anger is protecting or defending, we access its sacred intelligence. Mirabai's life shows that freedom sometimes requires the courage to be righteously angry.
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