The concentrated obsession with the beloved that, in Mirabai's case, channeled grief and rage into relentless spiritual practice and creative expression.
Vyasana typically means vice or obsession, but in bhakti it can denote the kind of singular focus that becomes transformative. Mirabai's obsession with Krishna, which her family saw as pathological, became the crucible in which her anger and grief were refined into devotional brilliance. Rather than scatter her rage across multiple resentments and targets, her vyasana concentrated it into a singular longing. Applied to the examined life, this concept suggests that what appears as obsessive rumination might be redirectable. If you find yourself unable to stop thinking about a loss, a betrayal, an injustice—instead of fighting that obsessive loop, what if you consciously transformed it? Mirabai teaches that vyasana, the very inability to let go, can become the fuel for relentless practice, writing, creating, dancing. The rage underneath often has tremendous energy; the question is whether that energy will splinter into destructive directions or whether it will be channeled into a vyasana that transforms both the griever and the world around them.
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