The cultivation of discrimination between authentic response and conditioned reactivity, essential for wise action during systemic upheaval.
Viveka—discrimination, discernment—is the yogic capacity to distinguish the eternal from the temporal, the self from the false self. Mirabai practiced viveka relentlessly, stripping away social identity, status, and convention to encounter what was truly her. In anticipatory grief for civilization, viveka becomes crucial: we must discern which responses arise from authentic wisdom and which from fear, rage, or despair. We must distinguish between genuine commitment to change and performative activism. We must see through which aspects of our grief are productive and which are indulgent. Viveka also helps us recognize which attachments to civilization's continuation are truly ours and which are inherited, unconscious patterns. Mirabai's poetry enacts this discernment constantly—questioning, testing, penetrating. She asks: Is this love or habit? Is this freedom or concealment? For those navigating civilizational change, viveka offers a practice: pause before acting, speaking, or committing. Ask: Does this arise from truth or conditioning? This practice sharpens wisdom.
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