Reframing anger as a form of spiritual devotion and moral witness against systems that violate love.
Mirabai's defiance of social and marital oppression wasn't secular rebellion—it was sacred rage. In bhakti tradition, anger at injustice becomes a form of devotion to truth, to dharma, to the divine integrity of love itself. This concept reclaims rage from shame: your anger may be a spiritual gift, a measure of how fiercely you love freedom and justice. Sacred rage distinguishes between destructive reactivity and righteous witness. It asks: Am I angry because something I love has been violated? Is my rage defending the vulnerable? The tradition teaches that divine anger (like Krishna's in the Bhagavad Gita) can be necessary and purifying. For those carrying "the rage underneath," this framework honors anger as potentially sacred while requiring examination of its aim: Does it serve love or only injury?
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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