Understanding mada (pride, intoxication) as a defensive mechanism that hardens rage and prevents authentic mourning and vulnerability.
Mada refers to intoxication, pride, or arrogance. In the examined-heart tradition, mada often masks grief: we swagger, assert dominance, perform strength, or cling to righteous indignation to avoid feeling loss. Mirabai encountered mada in the men around her—those whose pride (in caste, in masculinity, in propriety) prevented them from seeing her humanity. But she also had to examine her own mada: the part of her that wanted to be seen as special, right, or superior for her devotion. Rage can become intoxicating; it can feel more powerful than grief. The examined heart asks: Where am I using anger to maintain an image? Where am I defending my ego rather than protecting my heart? This is not about becoming passive but about distinguishing between rage that clarifies and rage that obscures. Mada dissolves when we admit what we've lost and what we long for—an admission that requires profound vulnerability.
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