The practice of voicing forbidden truths—anger at the divine, at loved ones, at injustice—as a path to authentic spiritual maturity.
Mirabai's poetry includes accusations and complaints directed at Krishna himself. She held nothing back. In a spiritual landscape that often demanded gratitude and acceptance, she insisted on her right to rage, to question, to demand accountability. This is profound spiritual maturity, not regression. Speaking the unspeakable—especially in contexts where women, the marginalized, or the grieving are expected to suffer silently—is liberation. Rage often remains trapped because we internalize prohibitions against expressing it. We fear judgment, rejection, or abandonment if we voice our true feelings. We tell ourselves we should be grateful, should be accepting, should move on. Yet unspoken rage festers. It emerges as depression, illness, self-harm, or misdirected cruelty. Mirabai's insistence on voicing her full inner truth—including its most uncomfortable dimensions—is a revolutionary act of freedom. This concept invites us to ask: What am I not allowed to say? Whose comfort am I protecting by silencing myself? What happens when I speak the truth I have been swallowing? Speaking the unspeakable, in safe and appropriate contexts, is how we reclaim ourselves and transform rage from poison into power.
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