Mirabai's willingness to be abandoned by family and society models how grief's protective rage guards the soul's freedom to pursue what truly matters.
Mirabai was abandoned—cast out by her family, her reputation destroyed, her life rendered precarious. Yet she reframed this abandonment as liberation. This concept examines the protective function of rage in grief: anger that arises when we are rejected can either harden into resentment or clarify into fierce self-protection. Mirabai's rage was not reactive despair but active refusal to be diminished by others' judgment. The examined heart recognizes that some anger in grief serves a crucial function—it protects the self from absorbing shame that belongs to those who rejected us. It maintains boundaries when grief makes us vulnerable to manipulation and reabsorption into harmful systems. Her spiritual path teaches that anger used wisely becomes a guardian of integrity. By feeling and honoring the rage at abandonment rather than performing gratitude or acceptance, we preserve the psychological space needed for genuine healing. Sacred abandonment is grief that has been metabolized into sovereignty.
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