The paradoxical bhakti practice of singing praises to the divine precisely for causing suffering, transforming victimhood into radical acceptance.
Ninda stuti—literally 'abuse praise'—is a courageous bhakti practice where the devotee praises God not despite suffering but because of it, trusting that all experience serves awakening. Mirabai's poems often celebrate Krishna's 'cruelty,' his infidelities, his distance, recognizing these apparent abandonments as his teaching. Ninda stuti doesn't mean denying pain or adopting toxic positivity; rather, it's a mature surrender that says: 'Even this—especially this—teaches me about love, truth, and freedom.' This framework offers profound medicine for unprocessed rage: the anger that demands 'this shouldn't have happened' can gradually evolve into 'this happened, and I trust my capacity to transform it.' Ninda stuti is not bypassing but integration—acknowledging that our deepest wounds often become our greatest teachers. By practicing this radical acceptance, we stop fighting reality and instead mine it for meaning, transforming victimhood into agency and bitterness into wisdom.
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