The paradoxical teaching that suffering and loss are part of the divine play (lila), not punishment—a frame that can recontextualize rage into cosmic perspective.
Lila means divine play or sport. Krishna, the absent beloved of bhakti tradition, plays hide-and-seek with creation. Suffering and loss are woven into this cosmic play—not as punishment but as the texture of existence itself. This teaching can easily become spiritual bypass if used to dismiss genuine injustice or pain. Yet for Mirabai, lila offered something different: permission to stop demanding that the universe make sense according to her will, and instead to engage with life as it actually is—broken, beautiful, mysterious. The rage underneath grief often stems from the belief that life should be fair, that loss should not happen, that the world should match our vision. Lila does not deny injustice but contextualizes suffering within a larger dance. This concept invites us to ask: Can I rage at injustice AND hold the paradox that loss, grief, and darkness are part of existence? Can I fight for change while surrendering to what cannot be changed?
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