Mirabai's fearless emotional exposure as a gateway to authentic metta, where opening the heart completely transforms how we extend goodwill to self and others.
Mirabai's devotional poetry strips away protective armor, revealing a heart utterly exposed to longing and love. In Buddhist practice, loving-kindness (metta) often becomes intellectual or distant, but Mirabai shows us that true metta requires radical vulnerability—the willingness to be broken open by our own capacity to care. When we practice loving-kindness while defended, our goodwill remains shallow. Mirabai's bhakti teaches that the examined heart must first acknowledge its wounds, its desperate yearning, its capacity to grieve. Only then can metta deepen from obligation into genuine warmth. This vulnerability becomes a bridge: we extend metta not from serene detachment, but from recognizing our shared fragility with all beings. In relationships, this means offering loving-kindness not despite our emotional truth, but through it.
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