A Sanskrit concept describing how specific emotions contain their own wisdom; anger and grief each have unique teachings if we pause to taste them fully.
In classical Indian aesthetics and philosophy, rasa—literally 'taste' or 'flavor'—names the idea that emotions are not obstacles to wisdom but distinct forms of knowledge. Mirabai's poetry expresses raw devotional rasa: the *vatsalya* rasa of longing, the *karuna* rasa of heartbreak, the *veera* rasa of defiant courage. Applied to grief and rage, this framework invites us to stop treating these emotions as problems to solve quickly. Instead, we develop the capacity to taste them—to notice their texture, their logic, their particular teachings. Anger often carries information about boundaries violated or values betrayed. Grief holds knowledge about what matters most. By cultivating emotional literacy through the lens of rasa, we move from reactive suppression or explosion toward discernment. The practice becomes: What is this anger trying to teach me? What flavor of truth does this grief contain?
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