Mirabai's devotional poetry maps the oscillation between felt absence of the beloved and moments of union, modeling how grief and rage cycle through longing rather than resolve.
Mirabai's theology centers on separation from Krishna—the beloved is perpetually distant, perpetually called. Rather than viewing this as pathology, bhakti names it the human condition: we grieve what we love. Her poetry cycles through abandonment, desperate longing, momentary union, and return to separation. This cycle, rather than a failure to achieve closure, becomes the rhythm of the examined life. For those carrying rage underneath grief, this framework is liberating: the rage need not be "solved." Instead, it becomes part of a meaningful oscillation. The anger of missing someone, of betrayal, of unmet need—these belong to love itself. Mirabai shows that the examined heart doesn't escape this cycle but learns to inhabit it with awareness. The rage that surfaces when union fades becomes not dysfunction but a deepening of capacity. Grief and anger are not problems to transcend but the very texture of conscious devotion.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.