Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Paradox as Spiritual Teaching

The practice of holding contradictions—love and anger, devotion and resistance, sorrow and joy—without resolving them into false peace.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's poetry is thick with paradox: the beloved is absent and intimately present; she is broken and whole; she serves in devotion while refusing servitude. The rage underneath often arises from demands that we resolve paradoxes prematurely—to choose between anger and love, grief and gratitude, self-advocacy and surrender. This concept invites us to inhabit paradox as a spiritual practice rather than a problem to solve. We can grieve what was lost and celebrate what remains. We can rage at injustice and maintain compassion. We can be devastated and still functional. Mirabai's bhakti path teaches that the divine is vast enough to contain all contradictions, and so are we. When we stop trying to flatten our experience into coherence, we access the living complexity of human emotion. The examined heart can hold anger and love simultaneously, can acknowledge rage while choosing devotion, can contain sorrow and fierce joy in the same moment.

Helpful guides
Mira
Love & Relationships
Peri
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