The austerity practice of sustained, conscious attention to one's inner experience without reaction, as a way to metabolize rage and grief.
Tapasya often translated as austerity or penance, refers to disciplined internal work—a sustained turning of attention inward with rigorous honesty. Mirabai practiced tapasya through her devotional life: she didn't flee her grief and rage but dwelled within them with focused attention. This concept offers a practical framework for those overwhelmed by the rage underneath grief: rather than suppressing or expressing explosively, you practice sustained witnessing. This means: sit with the anger for a defined period. Don't act on it, don't deny it, don't perform transcendence over it. Simply observe its texture, its temperature, its story. What story is the rage telling? What does it demand? What does it grieve? This disciplined attention gradually creates space between the feeling and your identity, between the reaction and your response. Mirabai's examined heart operated through tapasya—she didn't try to bypass her pain but to metabolize it through devoted attention. Over time, this practice doesn't eliminate anger but transforms it from a force that hijacks you into an energy you can work with. The rage becomes information rather than hijacker. Tapasya offers a path between suppression and explosion: disciplined, devoted, examined witnessing.
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