Lila (divine play) suggests that loss and grief, while genuinely painful, may be woven into a larger pattern beyond human comprehension or culpability.
In Hindu philosophy, lila refers to God's creative play—the cosmos unfolding not from necessity but from the divine delight in expression. This perspective invites radical acceptance: everything that occurs, including suffering and loss, participates in a vast creative unfolding. This does not mean loss is good or deserved, but that it may not be reducible to human error or moral failure. Mirabai, losing her husband young, did not interpret his death as evidence of her unworthiness or failure; instead, she saw it as Krishna's leela, an invitation to deeper love beyond the marriage form. For those drowning in guilt—replaying moments, imagining different choices, exhausting themselves with 'if only'—lila offers perspective: some events exceed your control and responsibility. Illness, accident, death, betrayal: these occur in the world. Your guilt may demand that you take responsibility for the uncontrollable; lila gently challenges this demand. It suggests that mystery is real, that not every loss has a human culprit, and that your role is not to master outcomes but to respond with grace and love to whatever arises. This is not an excuse for negligence, but a release from the grandiose burden of believing you could or should have controlled everything.
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