Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

The Witness Within: Observer of Rage

Cultivating the inner observer—a compassionate presence that witnesses anger without identification or judgment—central to Mirabai's meditative awareness.

Mira
Why It Matters

Within bhakti practice, there is always a double awareness: the heart feeling deeply, and a witness observing that feeling. Mirabai could sing her rage, her grief, her longing—and simultaneously, a part of her was aware of the singing, watching the emotion move through her. This witness is not cold or dissociated but compassionate; it creates space between the feeling and our identity with the feeling. Modern psychology calls this metacognition; bhakti calls it the sakshi, the witness. When rage arises, the practice is not to suppress it or indulge it, but to observe: I am angry. Anger is present. The body is hot. The thoughts are sharp. By maintaining this witness consciousness, we prevent rage from driving unconscious action while still honoring the emotion's reality. This requires practice—meditation, self-inquiry, honest reflection—but it is the foundation of emotional freedom. Mirabai's freedom came partly from her ability to feel everything and deny nothing, while remaining rooted in a larger awareness.

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