The concept that all experience—including grief and rage—is divine play, shifting how we hold our suffering.
Lila means divine play or sport. In Hindu philosophy, the universe itself is Krishna's lila—spontaneous, joyful creation without ultimate purpose beyond itself. This doesn't mean suffering is unreal or unworthy of rage. Rather, it invites a radical reframing: What if this grief, this rage, is part of a larger pattern I can't fully see? What if my rage has a role to play? Mirabai's suffering was real, but she held it within a vastness. She wasn't a victim of lila; she was a participant in it, playing her own part. This concept offers paradoxical comfort: your anger matters AND it exists within something larger than your individual narrative. This perspective can shift rage from isolated, personal victimhood into a more spacious understanding. It doesn't diminish your grief but contextualizes it. The practice: feel your rage fully while simultaneously sensing yourself as both the one who grieves and the consciousness witnessing that grief.
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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