The practice of releasing resentment—toward loss, fate, or others—to free creative energy and restore the capacity for love.
Kshama means forgiveness or forbearance. In Mirabai's life, she forgave the family that rejected her, the society that condemned her, perhaps even Krishna for his mystical distance. This forgiveness was not weakness but wisdom: holding onto rage would have calcified her heart and closed her voice. Applied to grief, kshama becomes essential. Grievers often harbor resentment: at the deceased for leaving, at themselves for surviving, at fate for the injustice of loss. This resentment, though understandable, blocks creative flow. Kshama does not deny the legitimacy of anger but invites release. Through forgiveness practices—writing, ritual, or dialogue—the griever gradually loosens the grip of rage. This freed energy returns to creative work. Forgiveness is not forgetting; it is choosing to hold the past differently. Mirabai teaches that kshama allows the heart to remain open, even in loss, making room for both grief and creation.
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