Speaking in ways that hold contradictions—loving someone and being hurt by them, wanting closeness and needing space.
Mirabai's poetry holds profound paradoxes: she loved Krishna who was absent, she was devoted yet questioned, she was ecstatic yet grieving. She didn't resolve these contradictions; she spoke them. This is the language the examined heart needs. Most conflict in relationships stems from an insistence on singular truth: either I'm right or you're right, either we're good or bad, either I love you or I'm angry at you. Mirabai models a richer language. She could say: I long for you and I'm furious you're not here. I'm devoted to this relationship and I need more from you. I love you and I'm scared. This language is available to anyone willing to develop it. It requires moving beyond binary thinking. The practice of this communication doesn't resolve tension; it transforms it. Instead of argument, you have honest complexity. Instead of choosing sides, you acknowledge the whole situation. The practice: in your next disagreement, practice saying: Both of these things are true. I [feeling/need], and you [feeling/need]. Notice how this changes the conversation.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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