Periagoge
Concept
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The Poison Cup: Vishakanya as Initiation

The mythic image of drinking poison meant for Krishna reframes unbearable suffering as a test of devotion, revealing how we can metabolize rage and grief into transformation.

Mira
Why It Matters

The legend of Mirabai and the poison cup—sent to kill her, which she drank without hesitation because she believed it was Krishna's gift—is often read as suicidal surrender. But it is better understood as initiatory: a point of no return. She drank poison and survived. What dies in that moment is not the self but the smaller self—the identity protected by fear. When we face our deepest rage and grief, we too reach a poison cup. We can refuse to drink and remain defended. Or we can drink—acknowledge the full toxicity of what we feel, the full magnitude of the loss—and discover that we are not destroyed. The poison becomes medicine. This is not positive thinking or spiritual bypass. It is the recognition that the feeling itself, however destructive it seems, is survivable. Mirabai's poison cup was her greatest freedom because it forced her to know her own indestructibility. Your anger and grief are the poison you must drink to reach the other side.

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