Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Nindā and the Freedom to Resist

Nindā is criticism or blame, which Mirabai faced relentlessly; she transformed it into a practice of not internalizing others' judgments, freeing rage to become righteous resistance.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai lived under constant nindā—criticism and blame from family, caste, and religious authorities for her refusal to conform. Rather than internalize this shame, she made it a spiritual practice: not to be wounded by blame, but to discern when anger is righteous and when it is defensive. This distinction is crucial for understanding rage underneath grief. Sometimes our anger at loss gets tangled with anger at how others have judged us for grieving 'wrongly' or for failing to prevent loss. Mirabai's example teaches us to separate legitimate resistance from internalized shame. She was angry—at patriarchal constraints, at Krishna's silence, at injustice—and she knew her anger was valid. By practicing non-attachment to others' criticism, we free our rage to become a clarifying force: pointing toward real wrongs and authentic boundaries rather than festering as resentment.

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