Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Sacred Defiance and Civilizational Heresy

Loving refusal to comply with narratives that deny reality, modeled on Mirabai's fearless spiritual nonconformity.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai defied the norms of her culture: she sang publicly, rejected widowhood conventions, danced in trance states, and centered her own direct experience of the divine over scriptural authority and priestly mediation. Her defiance was not angry rebellion but sacred refusal rooted in what she loved more than convention. In times of civilizational anticipatory grief, a similar sacred defiance becomes necessary: refusal to accept comfortable lies, to participate in collective denial, to pretend that business-as-usual will continue. This defiance is not cynical rage but what Mirabai models—passionate commitment to truth as an act of love. It means speaking what is real in institutions and relationships built on illusion, choosing integrity over belonging, honoring actual conditions over agreed-upon fictions. Sacred defiance does not require anger; it requires only unwillingness to betray what we know to be true. Mirabai's life teaches that such refusal, though costly, aligns us with something larger than social approval.

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