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Concept
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Sahitya Sadhana: Poetry as Spiritual Practice

Using lyrical expression and artistic creation as a direct path to metabolizing rage and examining the heart's deepest layers.

Mira
Why It Matters

Mirabai's defiance took form as sahitya sadhana—poetry as spiritual discipline and liberation. Her devotional songs, composed and performed despite social prohibition, transformed rage into art that transcended personal grievance into universal truth. This practice-framework suggests that for many, the examined life requires expression, not just introspection. Writing, singing, painting, or movement become ways of externalizing the rage underneath, witnessing it, and transmuting it. Rather than analyze anger in isolation, sahitya sadhana embodies it, gives it shape and voice, and offers it to something larger than the self. For those working with grief and rage, this framework invites: What form does my rage want to take? How can artistic practice become both confession and transformation? Mirabai's legacy shows that the most dangerous weapon against oppressive silence is the honest voice.

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