Bhakti is the path of loving surrender expressed through daily practice; commitment deepens through ritual and emotional expression, not willpower.
Bhakti means devotion expressed through singing, dancing, and ritual—not as escape but as the essential practice that sustains commitment. Mirabai danced and sang ecstatically, and these weren't entertainment; they were the disciplines that kept her connected to her vow. While Western commitment often relies on duty and self-discipline, bhakti teaches that sustained commitment requires joy, music, and beauty. The body matters. Rhythm matters. Community witness matters. This doesn't mean commitment should always feel good, but it does mean commitment needs regular practices that reconnect you to why you chose it. Whether through conversation, physical presence, creative expression, or ceremony, bhakti shows that commitments wither without embodied devotional practice. What practices keep your commitment alive and singing?
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.