The capacity to hold contradictory truths simultaneously—love and anger, celebration and devastation—without needing to resolve them.
Mirabai's poetry dwells in paradox: longing and ecstasy, rejection and belonging, the sacred in the erotic. She never resolved these tensions but lived inside them. Collective grief demands the same capacity. A beloved public figure may have been simultaneously an inspiration and a flawed human; a tragedy may deserve both remembrance and anger at its preventability. Our culture often pushes us toward singular narratives: either grieve or critique, either celebrate or condemn. Mirabai's example teaches that mature grief holds paradox without collapsing into either/or thinking. We can mourn someone's death while remaining truthful about their failures. We can honor what was meaningful about their life while acknowledging systems that harmed others. This paradox-holding prevents grief from becoming either sentimentality or cynicism, and it mirrors the actual complexity of human life and loss.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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