Mirabai's capacity for joy, song, and delight despite devastating circumstances models how grief and rage coexist with beauty, pleasure, and play.
Ranjanam—the capacity to delight, to be charmed, to find sweetness—persisted in Mirabai throughout her trials. She danced, she sang, she fell in love through poetry with the divine. This concept challenges the binary belief that serious grief requires grim suffering and that joy is disrespectful to loss. The examined heart discovers that the rage underneath often includes rage at being forced to choose: either you grieve properly (which looks like suffering) or you're not serious about your loss. Mirabai refused this trap. She held grief and delight simultaneously. Ranjanam teaches practitioners that resilience includes our capacity for beauty, for being surprised by joy, for laughter in dark times. The rage underneath sometimes defends against happiness because happiness feels like betrayal of the lost. But authentic spiritual maturity, Mirabai teaches, allows the heart to remain tender enough to hurt and flexible enough to still be delighted. This doesn't diminish loss; it honors the fullness of human experience.
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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