Understanding shiva's prohibitions—no music, work, or adornment—as embodied love language rather than punitive or superstitious requirements.
Shiva imposes strict restrictions: mourners sit low, cover mirrors, avoid leather shoes, abstain from music and work. Modern sensibility often dismisses these as archaic obligations. Mirabai's bhakti reframes restriction as freedom—fasting, ascetic practice, and renunciation of worldly comfort become ways to deepen relationship with the beloved. Similarly, shiva's restrictions are love-language: by withdrawing from normalcy, mourners honor the magnitude of loss. The restrictions say: this person mattered so much that I temporarily unmake my ordinary life. Mirrors covered = self-image suspended. Work paused = productivity ceases before the greater work of grief. No music, no celebration = the universe feels diminished without them. These are not punishment but devotion—the body and daily practice enacting what words cannot. The examined heart understands that constraint, freely chosen, becomes the fullest expression of love.
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