Mirabai's willingness to be wounded by love and loss opened her to spiritual insight; your grief over lost identity is itself a teacher.
Mirabai did not protect herself from the pain of her devotion or her social exile. She let herself be wounded by longing, by rejection, by the gap between her truth and the world's demands. This willingness to be wounded—rather than defended—became her path to wisdom. In grief for lost identity, the wound is real: you've lost a version of yourself, whether through your own choice or external circumstance. Rather than treating this wound as injury to overcome quickly, the bhakti wisdom suggests approaching it as gateway. What is this grief trying to teach you? What does the loss reveal about what truly matters? The wound breaks open your defended self, exposing what lies beneath. Mirabai's teachings show that the most profound wisdom often arrives through our most tender places. By approaching your grief with curiosity rather than shame, by allowing the wound to speak, you transform it from something to survive into something that educates your soul. This is not about celebrating suffering but about honoring its transformative potential.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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