Patience with grief itself—resisting the urge to rush integration or 'move on,' allowing the mourning process to unfold in its own sacred time.
Apeksha is the Sanskrit concept of waiting, longing, and patient expectation—not passive resignation, but active hope held in suspension. Mirabai waited for Krishna; she did not rush union or force resolution. In grief for a lost identity, apeksha is crucial: the modern world pressures you to move on, redefine yourself quickly, find the silver lining. Apeksha resists this. It says: sit with not-knowing. Wait for integration to arrive rather than forcing it. Your former self deserves unhurried witnessing. The grief has its own timing. Apeksha is not depression or stuckness; it's the devotional practice of patient presence with what is. You tend the grief like a garden rather than fighting it like an enemy. This waiting period—which might last months or years—is not wasted time. It's the time when your psyche reorganizes, when new identity quietly forms, when the lessons of your former self integrate into your becoming. Apeksha teaches that the deepest transformation requires patient faith in the process.
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